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Democrat and Watchman. FDlLiinlDirm rs.ir.ATBT A. R. VAN CLEAF. Office in Wagner's Block, East Main Street IATES OF ADVERTISING Cnesqnaro, three Insertions 52 CO I .acD8aoseo,neni insertion, per aqaare cu ne square, three months 4 00 One square, six months, ..... 6 00 C ne square, oue year 10 eo One-eighth column, three months............ 8 00 ae-eighth column, six months 12 00 (. He-eighth column, one year 20 00 l-He-fourth column, tnree monina... iz w Cne-fuurth column, six months 18 08 One-fourth column, one year 30 00 TERMS: Ingle Subscription, In dTnc........, fS 00 B Club , ........ 1 60 VOL. LIII, NO. 18-WHOLE NO. 2725. uan-coiumn, six months w Half column, one year 60 Oo One column, oue year H ... 1i0 01 r-usineaa cards, 6 lines or less, 1 year........... 6 00 l The above rates will be strictly adhered to CIRCLEVILLE, OHIO, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1889. NEW SERIES-VOL 28, NO. 1425. 1 . : : : TALI PUT LOW PJffi Democrat and VVatchmaD. YOU OUGHT TO VISIT The Little RACKET STORE, Corner Main and Canal. This is one place where people are never disappointed in finding prict-s as low as advertised. When the lust 7c. calicoes ar- advtrtised at 5c, they are sold at tnat hgure. (jood 8c. gingham is sold at 5 to 6c. Iwt Bleached mus lin. same grade as "Green Ticket Lonsdale," or "Fruit of Loom," is sold at 7c. per yard trued iwilied flannel, part wool and heavy, is lO.-.. per yard (worth 18 ) All-wool filled jeans and all-wool flannels low in proportion. Canton fUnnels cheap in all grades. Big Bargains in Blankets and Comforts. Men s and Boys' Clothing Lower than Ever Known in the County, Prices scarcely half regular rate3. nats ana Laps in. great variety cheap, lireat bargains in Dress Goods 5c. per yard up. Fine Henriettas and all-wool Suitings way below value. Men's, Women's and Children's Shoes at an enormous saving in ,outlay. All kinds of Notions, such as Hosiery, Handkerchiefs, Suspenders, etc., displayed all over the store and low prices marked on eacn arucie. Ladies9, liens' and Children's Underwear Very Cheap. Tfce Chief Bcnam for the great suc cess of Hood's Sarsaparilla Is found in the article Itself. It Is merit that wins, and the tact that Hood's Sarsaparilla actually accomplishes what Is claimed for It, Is what bas given to this medicine a popularity and ale greater than that of any other sarsapa- Mprit Wln rlUa or blood pnrl' IVieril VVIIla ner before the public. flood's Sarsaparilla cures Scrofula, Salt Hheum and all Humors, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Biliousness, overcomes That Tired Feeling, creates an Appetite, strengthens the Nerves, builds np the Whole System. Eml'i Mmrwnpnrilla is sold by all drug gists. $1 ; six for $5. Prepared by C I. Hood ft Co.. Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. 25c. a garment for. good weight. This business has taken front rank as headquarters for p?Iii&e?t Btm.p,, b" 11 . V 1 r , . , cist, rort omitn. trial o .irgains in all lines ot goods. .Everybody is invited to call and compare prices. While derfui Discovery free at e you are waiting for your train at the Main Street crossing of.S. V. K. K,., drop in and learn wiiere 10 Duy your ury uoods, at the A SCRAP OF PAPER SAVES HER LIFE. It was just an ordinary scrap of wrapping paper, bnt it saved ber life. She was in the last stages of consumption, told by physi cians that she was incurable ana could only live a short time; she weighed less than seventy pounds. On a piece of wrapping paper sue read of Dr. King s New Discovery, and got a sample bottle; it helped her, she oougbt a large bottle, it helped bcr more, bought another and gfew better fast, contin ued its use and is now strong, healthy, rosy pldmp, weighing 140 pounds. For fuller W. H. Cole, drug- bottles of this woo Discovery free at Evans & Krimmei's drug store. Sept 20. RACKET STORE, LOWER END OF MAIN STREET. CIRCLEVILLE, O Ciucinuati & Masking-um Valley Bail-way Company. Ttme-Cakd. ! If MCT MAT 19th, 1889. EASTWARD. No. 12. Jincinsttl 11.30 a.m Ii Ireland. ... 12.3Ap.in H ITTOW- ..... I 10 ma Wilmington. 1.50 8blaa 2.15 . Wssh'nC.H 4 87-Now Holland 8 00 CIRILK v 3 84 . Lancaster.... 4.25 . Jnact'n Oity 4.59 N.!xingtoa 5.07. PnVxars. ..... 5.51 .. - --S'jn--.STttls.... ttttt ' ftres-len 6.34 .. Dresden J.... 6.40 . jtfewcomers't 7 40 m Itonaiscn 8.20 . Pteabenvilto Fiitatmrgh... Tttltimnre .... Philrfolphls. Neir York No .6. No. 20. No. 10 5.10 .m 6 00 . 6 50 7 30 7.59 i 8 21 .. 1 8.40 .. : 9.15 .. to.io . ! 10.43 , 10. so I u. - U.ft- . 21p.m 12. 28 - 2.12 2.50 4.20 5.55 5.15 a. m 6.26 8 00 . 4.25 pjn 5.15 . 5 45 7 10 - ; 30 . 45 Ku. S. 4.17 p.m 4.35 6.07 5.15 - 2.15a m 2 55 4.21 6.00 6 45 p.m B.50 t.5 . 7.10 a.m 7.47 8 00 .51 . 9.00 .30 9.36 . 10.35 11.35 . 1.26 p.m 3.05 . 4.21 am 7.10 ATTORNEYS. J. WHEELER LOWE, TTOBNEY-AT-LAW. Office Boom No. 1. 2d Floor, City Boilulog, Circleville, Ohio. A June 21 18H9. J. W. HARSHA, ATTOBNSY-AT-LAW, Odd Fellows Block, CIRCLEVILLE, OHIO. DIETER'S Wmhi u JOHN SCHLEYER, A TTOBNEV-AT-LAW, CIKCLEVILLK, O.Of-Q- nee. Booms 14 and 16, Masonic Temple. LEE M. HAMMEL, A TTOBNBY-AT-LAW. Offloe in Boom No. 11, Mssonic Temple, CIBOLJEVILLE, O. Nov. 19, 1888. - ADOLPH OOLDFREDRICK. ATTOBNBY AX WW, Masonic Temple, Gtrcla-Tllle, Ohio. WSSTWABD. No.ll. No. 7 No. S. No.a. Sow York 6 SO p.m . 8.00 p.m Philadelphia 9.20 . 11.95 . Baltimore.... 8.55 - . 11.80 . Fittsbnrgh... ...... 7 30a.m ............ 12, 05 noon StenbenTille 9.04 ............ 1.52 p.m Denniion 5 0(vm 11.00 - 3 48 . NewcomerB't 6 36 11.S6 . 4.25 YJreadoo J.. . 6.35 . 1. 90pm 6.50 p.m 5 25 Drealen 6.40 . 1 25 . 6 55 5.30 nesville 7.28 S 05 . 7.30 . 6 10 - Putnam 7.32 - 2.09 . 7.34 . 6.14 . N.r.exlnton 8 20 - 2.A5 7 15 Jin net's City 8 27 - 3.02 No.1. 7.25 . Lancaster.... 9.05 3 88 5.16ajn 8.00 C1R0LI! V. 9.45 4.26 6.06 . Sew riolland 10 15 6.0 8 45 .. WMh'n O.H. 10.35 5.S0 7.05 - .... . Snbina 10.55 . 6 42 7.25 Wilmington. 11.15 - 6.05 7.53 Morrow 11.50 . 6.45 - 8.86 lorslend .... 12.15 7.17 . 9 05 Cincinnati .. 1 00 p.m 8.10 10.00 ...AH tTKine run bv Standard Time. . H. 8 makee direct connection for Golnmbns and Ohmio, alo all pointa on C A. O. Ky., to Mll-lerKbura;, incluai No 9 ha direct connection from Colnmbnf and Cbfcano. So,. 6 and 7 run daily between Putnam and Bres-Junction.No. 6 makes direct connection at Dresden Junction, both Eaat and West, also for ClnTeland via C. A. & C. Ky. F.M.WILKINSON, Gen. Freight and Ticket Agent, .0. DARLINGTON, Snpt.. , Zaneeville, O. ZaneflTfMe. O. H. B. MOBRIS, dtclevllle Agent. SCIOTO YALffi RAILWAY LOCAL IN EFFECT SEPT. 29, 188. TRAINS GOING SOUTH. 8TAT10KB. No. 2. I No. 4. No. 6. O inn.biia Lt e 36 a. m il. 25 a. m 6 00p.m Infirmary... " " (11.89 " 6 14 - Valley Crowing. " 7 53 "11.45 " 6 19 - Beeee'e 7 56 " ill.48 " 6 52 - Lockbonrne ' 8 03 ",11.55 6 29 - UTa!i,. ' 8 09 12.' 2 p.m 6.36 - Aahrille " 8 15 "'12 09 " 6.42 - Circle-, llle " fc.34 " 12,1:8 " 7.M - Hejerrllle ..... "!l2.:fi " 7.10 - Elmwood... ' 12.41 " 715 - Slngnton ' 8 .Vt " 12.4B 7 20 Einnikinnick " 9 1) 12.64 " 7 28 - Hopetown . " 9 0S " 1.05 " 7 31 - Ar. 'Mlllcothe " 15 ' 1.14 " 7 45 - Lt. ChilUcothe .. ' 9 16 " I SO " 7.50 Three Locks " 1 28 " 1.42 " . Htgby' " S-39 165 " Sharon.... . ' 646 " 2 03 " Waverly " 9 55 " 2.12 " 8.24 - O. S. Crossing ' 9 57 " 2.14 " Piket ;n " 10 07 " 2.24 " 8.35 - B-K Bnn.... " 111.19 " 2.38 lohnaon'a " l.';26 2.45 ' LncaTille " in 34 9.53 " 8 56 - Davia.... ' 10 42 u S.t'2 " Portmoutb " 1055 " 8 15 ' 9. IS - 0 N, W. Pepot . 107 " 3.17 " 9.17 ociowrilie . " 11.08 " 8..H0 " WheelembTirg i i 13 3.35 " Franklin Furnace ' 11.24 " S.4S " H-vrhil 11.31 8.54 " Hanging Bock 11 11. 40 " 4.15 1 ron Hn. " 1150 " 4.I0 10 5 - Pscersbnrg Ar 1 2 'Mi m. .25 10.15 - A. O. A I Junction. ' 12-iOp.m 4.45 10 35 Aialand... 12.30 4 56 (o.45 - CLARENCE OTJRTAIN, ATTOBNKY-AT-LAW, Olrcleville, Ohio. Offloe in Odd Fellowa' Block. r.o.satiTn. nu aoaaia. SMITH & MORRIS, ATT0BNKY8-AT-LAW,0ireleTille,0hlo. Offloe in Masonic Temple. SAMUEL W. COTJRTRIGHT, (Late Judge of the Court of Common Pleaa.) ATTOBNKY-AT-LAW, Circleville, Ohio. Offlce in Oourtricht'l new block. Oonrtitreet. north of Main. i.i.tnuniT. Bauer r.rouoM. ABERNBTHY & FOLSOM. ATTOBNY8-AT-LAW.CIrelille,OhIo. Offlce . In Old Masonic Block, formerly occupied by . jT.Ftge. J. P. WLNSTEAD, ATTOBNEY-AT-LAW ANDNOTABT PUBLIC. Oirclerille, Ohio. Offlce In Odd Fellows' build- tag, eeoona nory, corner room. WILLIAM VTETH, 4j-0TARY PUBLIC, Fire Inaurance, Seal Kitate jl. 1 collection unreau. umce 1 n Q O. Bayer'i Tailor Shop, S doora Eaat of Poit OBlce, Weat Main Street, Otrcleville, Ohio. PHYSICIANS. GEORGE T. ROW, TtHYBICIAN AND RTTnrt Trnw ne ...a 1 Idence, Eaat Main etreet, first door east ol carina jnarcie worta, uireieTille, Ohio. WILDER & BOWERS, PHruiulANS AND SURGEONS. Offlceln Pack'a Block. Entrance on Court atreet, in rear of . W. THOMWOB. T. B. WaiSBT THOMPSON & WRIGHT, IJUXSIUIANH AND 8UBOKONS. Lung and . " -" " ' -"wi. uimm apesiaity. rneumatli cabinet atttingi from 10 to 11 a. k. and 1 to 2 r. x except ;anay- "tnce on Court atreet, one door A. P. COTJRTRIGHT, pHYSIOIAN AND SUBQEON, Circleville, Ohio CHARLES NATJMANN, TTOMCEOPATBIC PHYSICIAN AND SUBOEON Li- ce in tne Nightingale Block, oppoeitr Court Houae, Circleville, Ohio. Office honra Eight to 10 a. m., 8 to 6 o'clock r. at., and 7 to 8 r. h E. A. VAN RIPER, FEMALE PHY8ICIAN. I am prepared to treat allof thediseaaea pertaining to the bnnian aye- .pui. uuswinc, a epeciaity umce and residence. locnn nnuae eaat or Farmerr Exchange Mill, Cir cieviiie. u. March 16, 1888. G. W. BUTLER r JSTf,KINAKY SURGEON. Graduate of Ontario V " etennary uollege, Toronto, Canada. Offlce ,, c'r- v'"rt ni High Ht., Circleville, 0. iiromptiy attended to. Telephone Boi No. R. LILLY, DEISTTIST Offlce 2d door east of Second National Bank, Mar. In, -BS-emoa. CIRCLEVILLE, O Trains Nofl. 2 and u Uaiiy. Tr.iit Nd. 4 datiy, except Scnday Train No. 4 tka Dinner at Chilllcothe. At stationa where time is omitted, trains do not st TRMNS GOING NORTH. STATIONS. No. 1. No. 3. No. ' ?hland Li 3:to.m 9. HI a. 01 5 OOp.n, A. V.X I. Junction- " 3 35 - 9.20 " 5 10 ' Ptrsburg ....' 4 05 " 9 40 " 5 30 " Iror.t n " 4 15 " 9.50 " A 40 " Birring Rock " 4 22 - 10 HO $50 " Bavnrliill " " iu.ll " ,.( " Franklin Furnace.." - 10. ,9 09 Whpe!erbnrg " 10.30 " 8.20 " Prlotcvillo . " . 53 - li, .-S - 6 5 - O. N. W. Depot " 501 - mi 48 fi ::8 , oit..month " 6 05 .0 55 - 6 40 " Davia " 11 08 " 6.53 " LncBSVille 6 24 11.15 ;,00 Johnson's 1I.22 - 7 ':7 " Big hun " i 36 11. " 7.13 " Piketoli " 47 - ; j .43 - 7 ofi - O. 3. Croaeing ' - 11.53 7 36 Wnverly .......... " '.58 - i sr, - T yt Sl aroo " 5 06 - I2.(i4p.n: 7 47 - Higby's " 6.13 I i 13 7.55 - Tbree Locks " - 12 24 - 11 - Ar. hliMo.the. " 8 35 - l s 23 - Lv. Chillirothe " K 50 .. 12 55 8 -26 - Hopetown ' 7 iK) i,n5 8 35 Kinnikiunick-.... " 7 07 1.12 s.42 Kingston " 7 14 - 1.19 - 8.49 Elmwood " 19 " 1.94 Hayenvtlle " 'i 24 - 1.29 t irclpville " 7 2 1 37 - q n7 Aahvllle .. " 7 51 1511 - 9 Jfi - I'mall's .. ' 7 r.7 ' 2 02 9 32 Lock bourne.. fill 2.09 9.29 Eeeee'y " 3.19 .. . - 9.4fi .. alley Oroeaing. . . 8.12 2.19 " 9.49 Infirmary 8.i7 2 25 Oolumbna Ar. 8.30 2 40 - 10.10 - Trains Nob I and 5 oal'.y. Train N 3 daily, ercepr Sunday. Train No. 1 takes breakfast at Cni'llcnthe. Train No. 3 ts Diunr at !h11iicotne. A" stations where time la omitted trains do not Hop. ,E. J. LILLY-, M. D. DENTIST, OFFICE IN WITTICH'S NEW BLOCK CIRCLEVILLE 0. FULLEN & BALDWIN NEW RESTAURANT, (B. BECHER'S OLD STAND.) TilE Finest Pla-e in the City. Op-n day and night. Mi als to order . Oysters in every style. Game and Fiah in siwion. The BHliaro Room at. tached has been renovated and better Sept. 14, 1888. MISS BERTIE COLE Winheg to inform the ladle that she still munufac iurea ALL KINDS OF HAIR GOODS, at uer anop, SOUTD PICKAWAY Street, up stairs, Over . B. COLE'S Blacksmith Shop. March 8a All Kinds of Book Holders Tttn urn c -n Dpurnn-i " J. nar liki As.tsjt.ja,i.nt U1UHUN AKX HOLD Jj it. Tl Prcpeuirj Euclra Table. Send for Catalogue. Fi. M . LAMBIE, 39 E. iethSt.,N.Y. ypyivvM POWDE find (lifemlcnl atilhorlllcs, who testify to it absolute purity. wboleaomeDew and Jwtriderful strength. Every in guaran- witn to ao tne worn 01 any oiner DHKing powder costing twice as much. Every can guaranteed to give satisfaction, or puri-unse money reiunaea. 1 lb. Cstn, SOc.; lb., iom M lb., Be. If your dealer does not keep Crown, do not let him persuade yon to buy some other ha claims to be just as good, but ask him to obligt vu eVVI"s DIETER'S CBOWK BAKIefS PQWfiEB- EDPKPdY. This is wbat too ouht to have, in fact, you must have it to fully eDioy life. Thou sands are searching for it daily, and mourn ing because they find it not. Thousands upon thousands of dollars are spent annually by our people in tne nope that they may at tain ibis boon. And yet it may be had by all. We guarantee that Electric Bitters, if used according to directions and the use pefalsteu In, will br.ng vou Good Diges'ion and oust the demon Dyspepsia and install instead Jiupepqy. We recommend Electric Bitters for Dyspepsia and all diseases of the Liver, btomnch and Kidneys. Sold at 50c and $1 per bottle, by Evans k Krimmel druggists. DO NOT SUFFER ANY LONGER Knowing acouh can be checked ina dav and the first stsges of consumptioL broken in a week, we hereby guarantee Dr Acker fingliBh Coil eh Remedy, and wiil refund the money 10 an woo ony, take it as per direc tions, and do not find our statement correct. J G Wildbb, druggist. WHAT R. B COOPER SAYS. . E. Jackson Dear Sir : I bad Bright's I disease in its worst form. I used two bot tles of your medicine, Burdick's Kidney Cure, and it has done wonders for me. The swelling has left my body and limbs, and I am so well I can walk out again This is the only remedy tbnt wobld feeh my caSa. Price, cents and $1 25. fivans 4 Krimmel. DANGER! Xroposccl. DR. ACKER'S ENGLISH PILLS Are active, effective and pure. For sick headache, disordered stomach, loss of sppe tite. bad complexion and biliousness, they have never beej equaled, either in America or abroad. J. G. Wilder, druggist. arbolisalve The Great Shin Remedy Relieves and Cure ItchlnsT9 and Irritations of tne Skin and Scalpi Either Itching' or Bleedlnp;, Ulcerations, Ccts, Wousd, Bsuisrs, Poi sons, Bites Of IXtiECTS.CATARRn, INFLAMKD Sorb Eye.;, Chilblains, Chaps and Chafes. R instantly reJieues Ois pain of Bums and Scalds, and cures (he worst case w ithmtt a ttxtH Small boxes 250. Large boxes 50b. Cole's Carbolisoap prevcntspimpies, blackheads, chapped and oily skin, and preserves, freshens uml beautifies the complex-Ion. It Is uncqualed for use in hard water, and its absolute miritv and delinntA ner- fume makes it a positive luxury for tn bath and nursery. Caution;- The labels on the genuine ftr nna tne ieni;ra u I'er.n. rrrpared only wi wiv a iAi., uiuua xuver i' aus. v la Sold by Geo. F. G.snd-G.rard. . ONE FACT Is worth a column of rhetoric, said an Amer icsn statesman It is a fact, established by the testimony of thousands of people, tbat Hood's SarF&prilia does cure scrofula, salt rhenm and other diseases or affections aria ing from impure state or low ci.ndition of the I blood. It also overcomes that tired feeling, creates a good appetite, and gives strength to every part of the system. Try it. ELIXIR OF DATES E'ixir of Dates is a luxury as well as a ne. -easily to all who suffer from constipation. dyspepsia, sick headache or piles. Bold by !1 rlrilrrivtn In n.ft fanl VmitX'Aa .nM K fi t . Urand Girard. A. "Wovtl of Warninj to Ke-puli" lioaiic4 mid Democrats Alike. The followinp; a'ticlo from the Cin cinnati Porcupino should put every citizen of Ohio, who brlievi-s in thrc purity of the flection, on his puu-d. Good laws can mt cnTorce thi'mrt Ives. Kegis- tration laws have ber-n and may he made a means of the nn-st gigantic and wholesale frauds evt rcoiiiiniltfd cm the bnllot-box in Ohio'. The Kor-aker-stranjler Third Term I'irates are a desperate crowd, and do not prr pose to ko-e this election if hrrzrn trr mi can defeat the aim of the peojile. Alrer.uy the honest men of C:m-ir.n:iti are orp-anir.in?; to capture and punish the rascals, if dirty work is done. Let this plan be followed in every city in Ohio: The electors of Iiomilton County and. the citizens of Cincinnati must arouse i themselves if they would prevent one of the most rascally, brazen schemes to defeat the will of the people nt the polls that has ever been concocted by a g'ang of political desperadoes, who fear noth ing but defeat. For a long series of years the city of Cincinnati has suffered in reputation, and great injury dene her business interests and prestig-9 by election frauds. This began in its most audacious form in the Presidential election, when Eph Holland and his gang Sot in their Che Work, for Which he was sent to the Dayton jail, from which he was pardoned by President Hayes. For years both parties imported black and white repeaters. In IbSi the city was disgraced by the armed bullies, black and white, under the infamous Iot Wright. In 1SS5 came the disgraceful exposures of which the Precinct A, Fourth Ward fraud was only an incident. The shameful assaults upon the integrity of the ballot-box has not been confined to either party. ltoth Republican and Democratic politi- cians of Cincinnati have been shown themselves capable of any rascality, and willing and anxious to commit any crime that would defeat the will of the people as honestly expressed by the ballot, and l?ad to the tt mporary success of their respective gangs and par ties. So frequent did the se outrages be come that thty grew monotonous; ana while thev oxcited the disgust of honest men, they Boomed powerless to protect j themselves. The agi'.ation led to the enactment of laws to protect decent people from the bullies, toughs, and professional political rascals. A registration law was tiassed: men were preft-nted from going within one hundred feet of the polls: an election board was created; judges and clerks of both parties were selected from the best citizens. Good results followed these laws, and for several years the people of this county and State have been repeatedly to.d that the elections in Cincinnati were absolutely fair and honest under otir present sys tem. Good prople have come to believe I his. That guardi.i of law anil order; disbanded, and vigilance sleeps, and the j citixens have been lulled to rest with fancied security. Xow, what are the ' tacts? There have been some of the ; most daringfrauds committed under this i so-called perfect system. Two years ago the labor candidate for Mayor was hon- j estly elected, hut he was counted out after the face of the returns at the Hoard LOOSE'S EXTRACT f.LOYER BLOSSOM v TUP flD n sSani..j rw..j. OUR VERY BEST PEOPLE Confirm our statement when we eay tbat Dr. Acker's English Remedy is in everyway superior to any and all other preparations 'or 'he threat and lungs. In wboopine ongh fnd croup, it is magic and relieves at nee We offer you a sample bottle free Re nemter, this remedy is sold on a positive U'lrar.tee. J. G. iloeb, druggists. A QUAKER'S OPINION. What John L. Haines, of Woodbnrv, N J.. says: J E Jackson Dear Sir: I had kidney trouble for years very bad; my pains at times were so great I would roll ;n the n .or I thought my case a helpless .ne. I used two bottles of your medicine (Burdick's Kidney Cure), and now I can do any kind of work. I recommend this to all sufferers. Price. 75 cents and $1 25. Sample free. For sale by Evans & Krimmel. ot lrauds that will surpass any rascality of the kind that has ever been committed or attempted. At first the judges and clerks appointed were the very best, but a number of professionals have gradually crept in who can not be trusted, and who must be watched. Certain irregularities have already arisen under the new election laws. The boxes are removed from the room when the voting takes place, and the habit has been revived of dumping the tickets in a pile on the table and sorting out the straight tickets, placing them in piles. These two vie latiims of law afford the opportunity for wholesale frauds. The registration aids in the perpetration of the fraud. It shews the rascals just how mtnv votes there are in a precinct. The l'oiciipiiie hrs information of a reliable character fvem a very curious source, which sl.i v.- t; at. ballot boxes have 'ieen proi uivd o: the exact duplicate of the regular i cX'-s. 'I hes.- are tobestuffed in ativnnce with . nch number of llepub- l!c:.n l'ck ts .-. may !. ne cessary and nie. Tb'-y w ll l.e placed in the hands of despi r:?te. smoolSi. but nervy men who are T( -p-v!::l le.' and when the poll clcse the regular box will disap-p ar and the str.fkd box will be put in its ph ce, and t'i" fraudulent votes will ; becounif d. If ihis fails, advantage is : ;o be taken of the habit of piling the ! straight Democratic and Republican j ticket in piles oi ten. As many Demo-! cratic ti-kets a possible will disappear, j and straight Republican tickets will be ! put in iheir prices. liy these two methods encugh fraudulent votes will be counted to have the enlii'e county ticket and prevent Governor Koraker from running behind in Hamilton County. The Cincinnati Cc rcmercial is preparing the way for this hold and infamous ras-rttlity. In an editorial Wednesday it said: "Campbell orght not to have 1,000 votes in Hamilton County." Tho Commercial might have as well said: "'Boys, destroy 30,000 Democratic votes and you will be protected." When we remember that there are two judges on the common pleas bench who are oath-hour.d members of the Strsnglers" secret organ ization, all may know that the rascals can understand that the Commercial is encouraging them to commit crime and promising then immunity. Had such a brutal bid -for rascality appeared in the editorial columns of the Enquirer, the Republican press in Ohio would have howled in horror. Appearing in the tommercial they are silent, or smilingly approve. "Anything to win," is the motto of the politicians of both parties. Hut the people of our city have more at stake than the politicians. The good name of Cincinnati must not be tarnished by fresh crimes against the right of fran chise. The Stranglers are a desperate gang. They are playing for big stakes. If Foraker wins there arc two more years of stealing and of rascality, and protection is guaranteed. If they loose. many of them will go erazv. Some will go to the penitentiary or asylum: many will go to Canada, and not wait for excursion rates. A fund should be raised, detectives employed, and a reliable citizen detailed to watch every ballot-box from the time the first vote is cast until the last, is counted. The Hoard of Elections ought to order every ballot-box fastened to the table in the room where voting is done, and only one vote f-hould be allowed to be taken from tho box at a time to be counted. What will yiiu do. .O men of Cincinnati? Will V( sit Willi folded hands and permit these crimes to be matured and perpetrated, or will you arise in the majesty of your wrath, and by prbiiijit action drive the bold and audacious knaves to cover? The committees of both parties are untrustworthy. There are men on both that would sell out their parties if they could get their price, twelve cTcTTts Tlave drawn in salaries over 340,000. or twenty cents for each separate name. Whilo Sl:20,000 additional has been spent, making the average cost of each name so far put in the roster eighty cents. Does any body pretend to say that the work should cost any such a sum of money? Kay, verily: it is simply working patriotism for boodle. It is a bonanza for a lot of political hangcr"s-on, whose services to the State consist of drawing unearned salaries and defaming and abusing men for being Democrats and opposing Forakerism and political phlebotomy. These stipendiaries draw salaries from the State and spend their time in running Foraker organs, disseminating Foraker literature, or working in the Republican Committee on State street. They outrival Comanche Indians in howling "boodle" and reviling respectable Democrats who earn honest salaries in honorable employment, while they draw seventy-five dollars per month and upward from the State Treasury for services they never perform. This scandal has become so notorious and flagrant that I regard it as a public duty to expose and denour.ee it. Its perpetrators are not content with the plunder they secure, but seek to prolong and perpetuate their oppor tunities by defaming, assailing and slandering respectable gentlemen who object to the State Treasury being turned into a third-term corruption fund slavering about patriotism and loyalty nd purity, with their arms up to their .'ihews in the public strong-box. Heboid the spectacle of the State Li- brar.an, whose salary is paid by Demo- vats. Prohibitionists and Republicans like, serving as Secretary of the Re-liMican Stale Committee, while seekers Her informa'ion go subsoiling after jook:, ent' inbtd in dust and cobwebs. Then turn to a Railroad Commissioner, a Commissioner of Labor Statistics and other officials paid enormous salaries by the State, w ho serve it by working m a partisan committee, organized to feed the vanity and promote tho ambition of one man, Who publicly characterizes t leading member of his own party Presi dent's. Cabinet as "an obscure Secre tary." Xo wonder that men like General Beatty, Captain Lee, General Walcutt, Dr. Ferrell and other distinguished Republicans give vent to their disgust to find the self-constituted leaders of thei party running a campaign on funds which belong to the State. I have called tho attention to this single scandal in the mildest terms possible. It is only one of a series that go to make up the sum total of political Phariseeistri and third termism which now rules the Republican roost. CAMPBELL AS A LEADER. From an Independent Stand point. The Springfield Sunday Neics (Inde pendent) says : James E. Campbell, Democratic nom Inee for Governor, has developed a virllit of courage and a stamina of vigor, as a campaigner, which have almost amazed the enemy, and enthtlsed and delighted the Democracy. Everywhere Mr. Campbell is in popular and urgent demand as a speaker. It will be impossible for him to accept .more than" one-third of the appointments which are clamorously pressed upon hitn. He has gotten near to the Democratic heart and every member now eagerly awaits the publication of bis speeches. The graceful way in which, he refutes the attacks of slander, and Where is the Committee of One l his manly manner of rebuking his tra- are candidates each at the head of his party s ticket. They are both above the average. Campbell I know nerson- ally. He is a first-rate fellow, and I promise that he shall make vou an ex cellent iiovernor. 1 promise vou that f he is elected he shall not reach out for too much power. All his acts will be such as you will approve, and they will not be for himself. ow for Foraker. He is also a eood fellow, but he is entirely too ambitious. He forgets that this fetate was organ- zea in 1801, nearly ninety years aeo. and that never yet has any man dared to oner Himself for the office of Gover nor three successive terms. We have had some excellent men as Governors men whom we have creatlv loved and respected, and whom we would aimost nave Deen wiiline to elect a third time. But the rule has been im perative. When they have served two terms they say, "stand aside ! Why is a aeparture from this eood rule now asked ? Some say that the rule does not apply to the State, but it does. All honor to George Washington for the splendid example he set to the United States and to the States themselves, I which has now for the first time, by the great State of Ohio, been trampled in the dust, suppose that George Washington had consented to serve three or four or an indefinite number of terms; suppose that Jefferson had consented ; suppose that Jackson had. Wouldn't we have had pretty near an elected monarchy by this time. This question, my friends, is your greatest care. I would ask what need have the Republicans to bring forward Foraker now? What crisis is at hand ? "On what meat doth this Csesar of ours feed?" At the boundary of the second term there flows a political Rubicon. If we cross it we are in Csesarism. I say, and I hope the people of Ohio will say, Stand back ! W e must say to Fora ker : "There have been others as loved as you, but we did not call them ; neither will we call you. The rule has by custom been given the sanctity of law. lt one century trom now we can say that no man has served a third term we can sav "There is no Cpesarism in our Government," but that we are a plain, honest Republic as in this dav. I wish you all had Mr. Campbell by the hand. Every one of you would like him. He is a good fellow, a plucky fellow, too, and in my opinion he will make an excellent Governor of our State. The Republicans have abused him because of his tariff opinions. I have not talked wth him on that subject, but I think he is about right. He is not a high protectionist, he is not a free trader. He is for taxation for rev enue only. What more would you have? A voice Campbell. Our Govern ment's not a corporation, and it has the right to raise revenue to carry on the Government, that is all. When an industry is in the cradle I am willing to rock it that's only motherly care. But when it rises in giant manhood and is able to pay out millions to carry an election I am not for it. I am for the protection of the people. So is Campbell. I venture to say that upon this subject Mr. Campbell is just where you On The Atlantic Ocean. 0" Shipboard, Steamship Rotterdam, 1 October 17th, '89. orreapondeuce Democrat and Watchman, Through Holland, I came to Belgium. It is much the same as Holland; near the coast, in fact, the same. The land is ditched and the water pumped into canals and carried away. Timber is scarce, and they are cultivating pine lorests as in Germany and in Holland. Passing through the country, you soon come to Brussels, the capital of Belgi um. It is quite a pretty city, but it is very hilly. Here Leopold II., King of Belgium, resides, and as in all other countries of Europe, you see plenty of t-okliers, although in case of war I doubt !f the Belgians would make much of a i.how, as they are a small fry compared with other European powers. The monetary unit there is the same as in franco. One hundred centimes make n franc, and five francs make one dollar. French is the language spoken in Belgium, and is in fact the language of the country, though near the line of Solland, the people speak both French iind Dutch. The city of Antwerp, on the river Scheldt, is the great maritime port ot Belgium, and has the finest docks in Europe ; the steamers of the Red Star Line land there, and the facilities there for handling freight are unsurpassed by any city in the world. The oity is laid out somewhat like Paris. The avenue De Keyser and other avenues remind one of the boulevards of Paris, and like Paris, is a city of hotels and boarding houses. On avenue De Mier is the house in which Rubens, the celebrated painter lived, in the year 1564, and a bust of him on the house with an inscription under it, reminds the passer by of that fact. In Antwerp, on Sept. 6th, 1889, occurred the greatest disaster that ever was in Belgium. Two men, M. Corvillianand Baron Hirsch, had bought fifty millions of condemned rifle cartridges of the Spanish government, in Spain, and were separating them in a large building in Antwerp, to make what they could out of them the lead, copper and gunpowder; there was a large amount of powder in the building and an explosion took place, damaging buildings for three-quarters of a mile around, and bursting the large Russian petroleum storage tanks, close by. The oil set fire to houses near the docks, and there was a great fire, lasting three days, and cartridges were exploded by the fire, and the houses and vessels near by looked as if a battle had taken place there. There were over one hundred and fifty people killed, and nearly four hundred wounded, the cartridges ex- would have him. Let us be impartial ; ploding all the time, sent bullets flying let us favor no classes. Class favorit ism, class privileges in such a country as ours, would only breed class hatred and strife. I have not been at a public meetine for ten or twelve years. A few years ago I was mad at the management of the democratic party, but now 1 am de lighted. I just ieel first rate. We have made a new start, and it is a splendid one. We are going to elect our Governor, a Democrat who1 will administer the government satisfactorily to both parties and who will not be greedy for patronage. If he does this we will re elect him, but if he puts his head up land, lor a third we are going to crack: it. of Elections showed that he had several ' Hundred? Where is the Commercial hundred majority, and that fact was ' Club? And the Chamber of Commerce? sent brondeast ail over the land. The ' Are you not all interested in an honest artists who committed this crime may . h4 fair election? Honest Democrats, be found to-day holding publico offices, j hottest RepubiicatlSi honest men of all and their names arc enrolled on the ros- ! parties, trades, callings, ahd professions, ter of the oath-bound Stranglers. From y want an honest election, meet information in the hands of the Poicu-i "d organize. Be vigilant and ready to pine, it is questionable whether Nayor arrest tho knaves, thieves, perjurers. Mosby was honestlv elected last spring, gam uiers, anu lascais at luenrsbevi- J ' , t r a rv i. r : l Facts nointed with unerring accuracy to , uenra ol uu. iuc iuupiu Ms CO TOaOB UAJtK sa in? oTTBisa Cancans. Hnmora. Sores. Ulcers. Swellinra. Tumors, Abscesses, Blood Poisoning, Salt Rheum, Catarrh, Erysipelas, Rheumatism. uu mis diwq ana dxid uiscases. Pbicb, $1 per Pint Bottle, or 6 Bottles for $5 iw, voa ooiia extract j.ou- J. JL LOOSE BED CLOVER CO.. Detroit. Mich. THAT TERRIBLE COUGH la the morning, hurried or difficult breath 1 g, raising phlegm, tightness in the chest, quickened pulse, chilliness in the evening r sweats at- nignt, all or any of these tines are the first stages of consumption !)r Acker's English Cod it b Remedy Will ire these fearful symptoms, and is sold no sr a positive guarantee by J. G. Wilder, druggist. BLUDBILDPR, The new vegetable tonic-allerative and Moid pnriuer, is in the shape of a pleasant -yrup, and contains in a concentrated form the most valuable vegetable curatives. which have been developed by modern medical and scienti6c research. It acts di rectly upon the blood, through it imparting tone and vigor to the entire system and eradicating disease and is unequalled as a ure tor tserolulous. Cancerous and other humors, whether constitn'ional or other wise. Catarrh, Khenmatism, Dyspepsia. Dropsy, sick and nervous headache, female weaknes?. and all Wood, liver and kidney diseases. Price, $1.00. Sold by Geo. F. Grand Girard. A SOLID TEEL FENCES MAUK OF sr. r ,UI SEJxenT1' SGiWETKING NEW. For Residences, Churches, Cemeteries, Farms Gardens. Gates, Arbors, Window Guards, Trellises, Fire-tiroof PLASTERING LATH, D0OB BATS, Ao. write for Illustrated Catalogue: mailed free CENTRAL EXPANDED METAL CO 116 Maler St., PittHbtirgh, Pa, Hardware flea keep it. Give name of this papa J. M Loose Red Clover Co. Gentlemen: I have been a sufferer for the last five years from rheumatism across the shoulders, and by using yonr Fluid Extract Red Clover, am entirely relieved; believe it has driven It from my system, and won t be a weather barometer any longer. Yonr truly. Palmer Bouse, Chicago. F. D. Dibbli. Sold in Circleville by Geo. F. Grand Gi rard, druggist. THE FIRST SYMPTOMS OF DEATH. Tired feeling, dull headache, pnins in va rious parts of the body, sinking at the pit of the stomach, loss of appetite, feverishness, pimples or sores, are all positive evidence of poisoned blood. No mutter how it became poisoned it must be purified to avoid death. Dr. Acker s Eaelish Blood Elixir has never failed to remove scrofulous and syphilitic poisons. Sold under positive guarantee by J. G. Wilder, druggist. Jackson's Wild Cherry & Tar Syrup. Tiie sttttidnrd remedy lor cough, colds, crenp, It. aiseof. bronchitis, asthma, q-iinsy, wh-topio ntfth i ic iii rit cun-mnption, aud all diteaaesof ths 'hrit and lungs, lt has stood the test for years .nd is c;'nilaupy STjVjns; in the public favor Krl'li 1 fc' J2VANIJ $ Kill MSI KL, ppt.6, ui WrcjgviU?, 0. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castorla. When she was a Child, she cried for Castorla. "Hien she became Miss, she clung to Castorla. f 'nen she had Children, she gave them Castoritv Tlmi is moner, but health is hippinesg, If you have a bar cold or cough use Dr. Bull's, Cough Syrup. J( wil pure ynq every time. Pripe, J5 cede, ' ' the conclusion that he was counted in in three Wards over the Hhine. The Republicans do not select bunglers and butchers c fio their infamous work like the Democrats have done. It is all done so artistically, so cleverly, so fairly, that it leaves no trail, and deceives the most honest and unsuspecting. Let us illustrate. At the lVesidential election in ig4. there were wonderful and. une countable gains in a number of Republican wards of this city. Hon. Dan Mc-Conville, on the Democratic State Executive Committee, came to Cincinnati to make an investigation. A precinct in j the Twelfth Ward showing the largest . Republican gain was selected for investigation. The precinct was polled, ! and the voters could not be found. The poll books were ex-aimed at the County Clerk's office, and 116 names were found on the list ina strange handwriting. Mike Ryan was one of theDemocratic judges of election. He is now a furitlvo from justice, a thief, and embezzler, and a wanderer on the face of the earth. That day he perjured himself; and sold out his party. He, with all the other judges and clerks left tho polls for thirty miniiles in tbB hands of the United States Supervisor, and while they were gone, he wrote ll(5 names on the poll pook. and put that number of Republican ballots in the bos for Maine liiitterWdfth afl4 refdrmi Will Taft, now a Common Pleas .liidgp; fcas then United States Supervisor of Flections. He issued printed instructions to all his precinct supervisors, quoting the law nnd fixing the duties of each. Among other things, eaeh supervisor was told i hat it was his right and duty to be prese nt during the balloting and counting of the votes; but under no circumstances was he to interfere with the election officers, or to assume or discharge any of their duties. In vidftionof the plain letter of the lsw. ibis si pcrvisor took entire charge cf Ihe polls, end sttifiid theballot-box, writing as many names as he could in thirty minutes. Ti.e attention of iir. Talt wat called to the violation of l::w by his deputy, as pft forth in his own letter of instructions, and to the peculiar acts am' circumstances con nected with that unlawful proceeding. He scornfully laughed, and brushed the Whole charge away with a toss tf the head, a wave of the haflrb, and the lofty information that "that man belonged to one of tho best families in Cincinnati, and his character as a citizen and a lawyer was above reproach." That man of such good fam ly and such spotless character has since proven ono of the most audacious rascals, forgers and criminals ever known in the history of Cincinnati. Ilut he was respectable. He sleeps in a suicide's grave. His name is Charles A. Kebler. Some innocents will say that such an act can not be commi tted under the present laws. No; but worse ones have been committed, ar.d are about to bo committed under the present laws, and aided by ail the machinery the law has set in motion. We do not mean to reflect upon the character of tho gentlemen who compose tho Hoard of Elections. They are above reproach, but their duties are in their office. They can not watch tho ballot box in each precinct on tho day of election. Good citizens should do that. Good citizens have not done that. Good laws can not enforce themselves, and the rascals, always vigilant for opportunities, hae found them; and. emboldened ,y pgt siiy-cegsea, thy are noy m'tjajjjja;' ft j8 has spoken. It cares not who is elected: but, with all good citizens, it is deeply moved and profoundly interested in an honest election. We must have if, or fctiB sfvernment is a failure. Let us have iiniteci arid brbhipt ast'or!:- Cincinnati Porcupin". (Ind.) A Scandalous Leak in the State treasury Exposed, On the 15th of March, 1S84, the Democratic Legislature, elected with Gov ernor George Hoadly, passed a joint resolution providing for the publication of a roster Of Ohio soldiers in the late war to perpetuate a record of the various organizations and the names of the in dividual members thereof in a permanent and populiirly accessible form. There was appropriated to carry on the work the sum of 5,000. During the adjourned session in 18S9 9,300 addi tional was appropriated, making J514,500 In all. Ten clerks were employed sixteen months in the work, and about two- thirds of it Was completed wheh Fbraker and H tlepubliCari Legislature came in, and the Democratic clerks were turned out The Work which remained to be done oh the roster aflorded but little chances for pickings, so a bonfire was iriade of all the carefully prepared roster copy and a small army ot Republican1 clerks were put on tho State pay-rolls to do the' work. They began in January, 1SS0, and the pay-roster has been swelling ever since, until new it has reached enoimous and dropsical proportions, with a steady growth going on. Alter the lapse of nearly four years twelvo stipendiaries have performed about as much work as ten clerks did in a little more than a year. It will take them two years more to finish the work at the rate they have been proceedihgi And how inUch has it cost during the past four years? The figures are startling Wheh one considers the amount of Work that has been done by Governor Foraker! stipendiaries. The sums of money paid blit and appropriated, under the Foraker regime, amount to S?it0,'J1.7 38, as shown by the official records. What was there to do in preparing the roster? To prepare fr m the muster rolls in the Adjutant-General's office, so as to put in book form, the complete company and regimental organizations of the Ohio troops in the war. In other words, to make a complete copy of the records on file. It was a big job of copying, but one that could be done readily. There were 318,189 soldiers enrolled in Ohio during tho war. Consequently there were 318,180 mimes to copy with brief annotations showing that the sol dier was discharged, was killed, had died, was missing or had deserted, as the case might bp. It would not be a very big job to copy 200 names in a day. At this rate it would require one man 1,591 days, or five years one month and three days, estimating 312 working days in a year. lt would take twelve men less than a year to do it. Yet t elve men are finishing up their fourth year at the job. The ten Democratic clerks managed to prepare 200,000 names for $14,500, or at the rate of seven cents per name. Under the Republican regime for preparing tfce Banie number of nam.ps ducers have pushed him to the fore front as one of the most influential speakers and successful campaigners in the party. Mr. Campbell is not only taking Care of himself but he is helping his party as Well, tt is deplorable that the Republicans should have begun a mild campaign against Mr. Campbell because it has called fdr the' exposure that Governor Foraker is a erf vul nerable man in many of his relations to his fellowmen. Mr. Campbell does not mirice matters where his honor or integrity are impugned. His force, p"f 5fhJ'tnSS and clearness of denial and refutation, and his identity and de scription of the men who are doing the dirty work, have captivated the people, and won for him the admiration and confldehse of the voting public. The TJemocratic party is t nthusisstically and warmly congratulating itself on the brilliancy, the energy, the industry, the gallantry and the valor of their leader. in all directions, and many victims of the explosion who were at work in the building, were burned up. All the plate glass windows in the vicinity were broken into pieces, and some shipping and warehouses damaged, and the event will never be forgotten in Antwerp or Belgium. The hospitals of Antwerp are full of the wounded, many from bullet wounds caused while the fire was in progress. . We left Rotterdam on the steamship Rotterdam, of the Netherlands Line, on Oct. 5th, and are now at this time about nine hundred miles east of Newfound- and except for bad and rough weather, we would now be in New York. On board are about one hun- Two Important Election Laws. dred "a"118- 1 hey got on the ship at The Legislature of Ohio last winter looking lot of people. On Oct. 15th, passed two important election laws, i one of them died, and that night they one concerning persons loitering about I Put him to gd se threw him over-, - .. , ,, ., . board to feed the fishes. It would have places of voting, and the other in re-1 . . ftAr Tnr thft t,,,,, StatJl if th. gard to having two clerks in election ! wnole lot of them had died, but I sup-precincts one of each party so as to ', posA it might have been a little rough insure "an honest count." 1 on the fish, so large a dose of them at The first law is here given in full : AH ACT one time; however, they are well fed on this steamer, and would not care if the vessel did not reach America until To amend Section 2938 of the Revised j next summer, for they are getting what statutes. j they never got in Italy three square SectIo's 1. Be tt enacted by the General j meals a day. Asssembly of ihe State of Ohio, That Section 2938 be amended to read as follows : Sec. 2938. Judges of elections shall, I Last night, we met the steamship of the Bremen Line, bound for Germany. She showed her lights, three white lights in form of a triangle. One if requested, permit the respective can- j hour later we met the French Line diriatea. or not exceeding- three of their i steamer, bound for France. She too trienas, to De present in the room where the judges ere during the time of receiving and counting out the ballots ; and at all elections held within boundaries of any municipal corporation during the receiving and counting of the ballots no person shall congre showed her lights, red, white and blue, while we showed our lights of the Netherland's, American Line, green, white and green. This line of steamers are not very fast, there time being ten or twelve days, but the accommoda tions are good, and every berth on the The Adams Co. Ixfcnder, 17th ult savs : Foraker's coon clerk of the Chillicothe Election Board is a daisy. He was in the rebel army and now he is in a muss which shows him to be a worthy associate of George Cox and Tommy Thompson. Charges were preferred against him last week by the A. M. E. Church of Chillicothe, accusing him of lying and performing an abortion. My, doesn't "Little Breeches" surround himself with a sweet-scented set? J The Pittsburg Post says : It is pretty clear that James E. Campbell is a level headed man ; knows when to hold his tongue and when to Speak. There is a spice of acuteness in hlS JJolitife management of this lorgery business that shows him fully competent to ceal with "the Stranglers," as the Foraker gang is called. elector in reaching or leaving the place fixed for casting his ballot, or within such distance of seventy five to give or to tender or exhibit any ballot or ticket to any person other than a judge oi election, or to exhibit any ticket or bal lot which he intends to cast, or so licit or in any way attempt to influence-any elector in casting his vote. In the discharge of their duties, the judges o: elections may, if necessary, appoint and require any elector or electors to aid them in making known their orders or directions and in enforcing the peace. The judges of election, or any of them, may order the arrest of any person violating this section, but such arrest shall not prevent such person from voting if he is entitled so to do. The sheriff, and all constables, policemen, and officers of the peace, and all bystanders at any election, shall imme diately obey and aid in enforcing any and every lawful order made by the judges at any election in execution o' the provisions of this section. Any person willfully refusing or neglecting to perform any of the duties of thio section rtrese.rihed. shall be fined not Because it succeeded in committing i ,u five d0nar8 nor more thai: grand larceny on the Presidency of the i one thousand dollars, or imprisoned in United States, the Republican party j the county jail not less tnan nve days iL . .. .. ,;f 7. nor more than thirty days, or both- miagmesthatit can commit peUt idedf nothing as 8ectiol. ceny on Montana. Times have changed, i 8hall be go conBtrued as to conflict with gate or loiter upon the streets, alleys i line from Europe is full for this month's and sidewalks within seventy five feet j sailing. A steamer leaves Holland for of the nollinir nlftce of anv elefttinn. nr America, every Saturday. Most of the in any manner hinder or delay any i provisions used on board the vessel are however, since the country permitted Itself to be disgraced by the infamous fraud of 1876. The Republican State ticket in Virginia is composed of Mahone and two other rebel brigadiers. HON. W. S.'gROESBECK. His First Democratic Speech for Years. Hon. William S. Groesbeck, in his address at the Music Hall Democratic meeting, in Cincinnati, Thursday evening, 24th inst., said : Now about the constitutional amendment. It is upon taxation. The old Constitution rjrovides that taxes shall be levied on all property according to its value in money. This looks all right, and it is. Why, then, is this proposed amendment offered ? It conies from where I know not ; by whom it was prepared I know not. It may favor the money-lender at the expense of the farmer ; in short, it would oreaK down all barriers of the weak against the strong. By it all power will be conferred on the Legislature. Am I in favor of this? Not if I know myself. sections 2926 to 2926m;, inclusive. Section 2. That section 2938 of the Revised Statutes is hereby repealed. Section 3. This act shall takes effect on its passage. Elbert L. Lampson, Speaker of the House of Representatives Wm. C. Lyon, President of the Scnati. Passed April 15, 1889. The enactment in regard to clerks at each election is as follows : Sec. 2932 (a). In all public election:. in townships not divided into electioi precincts there shall be two clerks, hav Ling the qualifications of electors there in, one ot whom snail oe tne townsnit' clerk and the other shall be chosen sa provided in section two thousand nine hundred and thirty-five, and he shsi, not be a member of the same politica'. party as the township clerk. And n. townships divided into election pre cincts there shall be two clerks in eacl Dreclnct. The township clerk shall act as one of the clerks in the precinet in which he resides, and the othe; clerks Bhall be chosen as provided i; section two thousand nine huiidrc and thirty -five ; provided, that only one of the clerks so chosen in each precinct shall belong to the same political part- as the township clerk, and in all casf I., . . i . - i ,la I IIP DOllUCUl Ultl l-v UtWHIIE iuc iik-a If any one could give me a Legislature from heaven. comDOsed entirely of an gels, I would not give unlimited powers . highest vote at the preceding townshi . of taxation to it. I election to the dominant party in that I 'ow bout the two young men wtio .ownsiup gftaii be reevea, of American production, except beer and cigars, which are of Holland manufacture, and are cheap, for there is no duty in Holland on the manufacture of either of them. This vessel is an iron steamer, four hundred and twenty feet in length, has four masts, and her speed is about twelve miles an hour, and she burns fifty tons of coal every twenty-four hours, and has electric lights throughout. There are about four hundred passengers on board, about two hundred of them being emigrants. They are brought to New York for twenty-one dollars each, thirty five hundred miles, board included. It is very cheap, but it pays the company, for no freight pays so well as emigrants. These are the free trade goods that come in the United States free of duty, and the effect will be felt more in the future than in the past. Stick a pin here. Time will tell. They just now tock some beef from the cold storage room, for use on the ship ; it costs twenty cents per pound by the carcass, in Hol land; the same beel costs in jersey City, U. S., eight cents per pound by the carcass, yet some people have the call to say you can live cheaper in Eu- ., - . : a-, i . c 1 1 - rope man in America, i tie iuci. ut iua matter is this, there is only one coun try where the people all live, that is in America; in Europe only half of them live, the other half simply exist, and in some parts it is a struggle for that. I have not seen a pie since 1 leu America ; they are not used in Europe. The barbers, oh ! they are a caution. chloroform would have no effect on a man when an European barber started to work on him. To the American barbers I would say, when you shave a man from Europe, go at him rough, ior he may think he has not got the worth of his money if he is not almost skinned alive, same as he is at home. In a few days 1 expect our vessel will reach New York, then I will step ashore in the best country on the globe. The Worlds rair or Jixposition, I hear, is to be held in New York, in the year 1892, to celebrate the landing in America, of UolumDus. ine grounds have been selected ; they are bounded by 127th street on the north, and 97th street on the south, and are between Fourth avenue and North river. It is said the Committee will spend for site and buildings, fifteen million dollars, besides they will use most if not all of Central Park. It is intended to eclipse the Paris Exposition, and if it does it will be a monster, for up to Sept. 15th, the admissions to the Pam Exposition were 17,096,952, as shown by the Secretaries of the same ; the railway to and in the grounds averaged 33,000 passengers daily up to September 15th, but as America is a land of wonders, this record may be beaten. Yours Respectfully, TowsstND N. Caskev.

Democrat and Watchman. FDlLiinlDirm rs.ir.ATBT A. R. VAN CLEAF. Office in Wagner's Block, East Main Street IATES OF ADVERTISING Cnesqnaro, three Insertions 52 CO I .acD8aoseo,neni insertion, per aqaare cu ne square, three months 4 00 One square, six months, ..... 6 00 C ne square, oue year 10 eo One-eighth column, three months............ 8 00 ae-eighth column, six months 12 00 (. He-eighth column, one year 20 00 l-He-fourth column, tnree monina... iz w Cne-fuurth column, six months 18 08 One-fourth column, one year 30 00 TERMS: Ingle Subscription, In dTnc........, fS 00 B Club , ........ 1 60 VOL. LIII, NO. 18-WHOLE NO. 2725. uan-coiumn, six months w Half column, one year 60 Oo One column, oue year H ... 1i0 01 r-usineaa cards, 6 lines or less, 1 year........... 6 00 l The above rates will be strictly adhered to CIRCLEVILLE, OHIO, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1889. NEW SERIES-VOL 28, NO. 1425. 1 . : : : TALI PUT LOW PJffi Democrat and VVatchmaD. YOU OUGHT TO VISIT The Little RACKET STORE, Corner Main and Canal. This is one place where people are never disappointed in finding prict-s as low as advertised. When the lust 7c. calicoes ar- advtrtised at 5c, they are sold at tnat hgure. (jood 8c. gingham is sold at 5 to 6c. Iwt Bleached mus lin. same grade as "Green Ticket Lonsdale," or "Fruit of Loom," is sold at 7c. per yard trued iwilied flannel, part wool and heavy, is lO.-.. per yard (worth 18 ) All-wool filled jeans and all-wool flannels low in proportion. Canton fUnnels cheap in all grades. Big Bargains in Blankets and Comforts. Men s and Boys' Clothing Lower than Ever Known in the County, Prices scarcely half regular rate3. nats ana Laps in. great variety cheap, lireat bargains in Dress Goods 5c. per yard up. Fine Henriettas and all-wool Suitings way below value. Men's, Women's and Children's Shoes at an enormous saving in ,outlay. All kinds of Notions, such as Hosiery, Handkerchiefs, Suspenders, etc., displayed all over the store and low prices marked on eacn arucie. Ladies9, liens' and Children's Underwear Very Cheap. Tfce Chief Bcnam for the great suc cess of Hood's Sarsaparilla Is found in the article Itself. It Is merit that wins, and the tact that Hood's Sarsaparilla actually accomplishes what Is claimed for It, Is what bas given to this medicine a popularity and ale greater than that of any other sarsapa- Mprit Wln rlUa or blood pnrl' IVieril VVIIla ner before the public. flood's Sarsaparilla cures Scrofula, Salt Hheum and all Humors, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Biliousness, overcomes That Tired Feeling, creates an Appetite, strengthens the Nerves, builds np the Whole System. Eml'i Mmrwnpnrilla is sold by all drug gists. $1 ; six for $5. Prepared by C I. Hood ft Co.. Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. 25c. a garment for. good weight. This business has taken front rank as headquarters for p?Iii&e?t Btm.p,, b" 11 . V 1 r , . , cist, rort omitn. trial o .irgains in all lines ot goods. .Everybody is invited to call and compare prices. While derfui Discovery free at e you are waiting for your train at the Main Street crossing of.S. V. K. K,., drop in and learn wiiere 10 Duy your ury uoods, at the A SCRAP OF PAPER SAVES HER LIFE. It was just an ordinary scrap of wrapping paper, bnt it saved ber life. She was in the last stages of consumption, told by physi cians that she was incurable ana could only live a short time; she weighed less than seventy pounds. On a piece of wrapping paper sue read of Dr. King s New Discovery, and got a sample bottle; it helped her, she oougbt a large bottle, it helped bcr more, bought another and gfew better fast, contin ued its use and is now strong, healthy, rosy pldmp, weighing 140 pounds. For fuller W. H. Cole, drug- bottles of this woo Discovery free at Evans & Krimmei's drug store. Sept 20. RACKET STORE, LOWER END OF MAIN STREET. CIRCLEVILLE, O Ciucinuati & Masking-um Valley Bail-way Company. Ttme-Cakd. ! If MCT MAT 19th, 1889. EASTWARD. No. 12. Jincinsttl 11.30 a.m Ii Ireland. ... 12.3Ap.in H ITTOW- ..... I 10 ma Wilmington. 1.50 8blaa 2.15 . Wssh'nC.H 4 87-Now Holland 8 00 CIRILK v 3 84 . Lancaster.... 4.25 . Jnact'n Oity 4.59 N.!xingtoa 5.07. PnVxars. ..... 5.51 .. - --S'jn--.STttls.... ttttt ' ftres-len 6.34 .. Dresden J.... 6.40 . jtfewcomers't 7 40 m Itonaiscn 8.20 . Pteabenvilto Fiitatmrgh... Tttltimnre .... Philrfolphls. Neir York No .6. No. 20. No. 10 5.10 .m 6 00 . 6 50 7 30 7.59 i 8 21 .. 1 8.40 .. : 9.15 .. to.io . ! 10.43 , 10. so I u. - U.ft- . 21p.m 12. 28 - 2.12 2.50 4.20 5.55 5.15 a. m 6.26 8 00 . 4.25 pjn 5.15 . 5 45 7 10 - ; 30 . 45 Ku. S. 4.17 p.m 4.35 6.07 5.15 - 2.15a m 2 55 4.21 6.00 6 45 p.m B.50 t.5 . 7.10 a.m 7.47 8 00 .51 . 9.00 .30 9.36 . 10.35 11.35 . 1.26 p.m 3.05 . 4.21 am 7.10 ATTORNEYS. J. WHEELER LOWE, TTOBNEY-AT-LAW. Office Boom No. 1. 2d Floor, City Boilulog, Circleville, Ohio. A June 21 18H9. J. W. HARSHA, ATTOBNSY-AT-LAW, Odd Fellows Block, CIRCLEVILLE, OHIO. DIETER'S Wmhi u JOHN SCHLEYER, A TTOBNEV-AT-LAW, CIKCLEVILLK, O.Of-Q- nee. Booms 14 and 16, Masonic Temple. LEE M. HAMMEL, A TTOBNBY-AT-LAW. Offloe in Boom No. 11, Mssonic Temple, CIBOLJEVILLE, O. Nov. 19, 1888. - ADOLPH OOLDFREDRICK. ATTOBNBY AX WW, Masonic Temple, Gtrcla-Tllle, Ohio. WSSTWABD. No.ll. No. 7 No. S. No.a. Sow York 6 SO p.m . 8.00 p.m Philadelphia 9.20 . 11.95 . Baltimore.... 8.55 - . 11.80 . Fittsbnrgh... ...... 7 30a.m ............ 12, 05 noon StenbenTille 9.04 ............ 1.52 p.m Denniion 5 0(vm 11.00 - 3 48 . NewcomerB't 6 36 11.S6 . 4.25 YJreadoo J.. . 6.35 . 1. 90pm 6.50 p.m 5 25 Drealen 6.40 . 1 25 . 6 55 5.30 nesville 7.28 S 05 . 7.30 . 6 10 - Putnam 7.32 - 2.09 . 7.34 . 6.14 . N.r.exlnton 8 20 - 2.A5 7 15 Jin net's City 8 27 - 3.02 No.1. 7.25 . Lancaster.... 9.05 3 88 5.16ajn 8.00 C1R0LI! V. 9.45 4.26 6.06 . Sew riolland 10 15 6.0 8 45 .. WMh'n O.H. 10.35 5.S0 7.05 - .... . Snbina 10.55 . 6 42 7.25 Wilmington. 11.15 - 6.05 7.53 Morrow 11.50 . 6.45 - 8.86 lorslend .... 12.15 7.17 . 9 05 Cincinnati .. 1 00 p.m 8.10 10.00 ...AH tTKine run bv Standard Time. . H. 8 makee direct connection for Golnmbns and Ohmio, alo all pointa on C A. O. Ky., to Mll-lerKbura;, incluai No 9 ha direct connection from Colnmbnf and Cbfcano. So,. 6 and 7 run daily between Putnam and Bres-Junction.No. 6 makes direct connection at Dresden Junction, both Eaat and West, also for ClnTeland via C. A. & C. Ky. F.M.WILKINSON, Gen. Freight and Ticket Agent, .0. DARLINGTON, Snpt.. , Zaneeville, O. ZaneflTfMe. O. H. B. MOBRIS, dtclevllle Agent. SCIOTO YALffi RAILWAY LOCAL IN EFFECT SEPT. 29, 188. TRAINS GOING SOUTH. 8TAT10KB. No. 2. I No. 4. No. 6. O inn.biia Lt e 36 a. m il. 25 a. m 6 00p.m Infirmary... " " (11.89 " 6 14 - Valley Crowing. " 7 53 "11.45 " 6 19 - Beeee'e 7 56 " ill.48 " 6 52 - Lockbonrne ' 8 03 ",11.55 6 29 - UTa!i,. ' 8 09 12.' 2 p.m 6.36 - Aahrille " 8 15 "'12 09 " 6.42 - Circle-, llle " fc.34 " 12,1:8 " 7.M - Hejerrllle ..... "!l2.:fi " 7.10 - Elmwood... ' 12.41 " 715 - Slngnton ' 8 .Vt " 12.4B 7 20 Einnikinnick " 9 1) 12.64 " 7 28 - Hopetown . " 9 0S " 1.05 " 7 31 - Ar. 'Mlllcothe " 15 ' 1.14 " 7 45 - Lt. ChilUcothe .. ' 9 16 " I SO " 7.50 Three Locks " 1 28 " 1.42 " . Htgby' " S-39 165 " Sharon.... . ' 646 " 2 03 " Waverly " 9 55 " 2.12 " 8.24 - O. S. Crossing ' 9 57 " 2.14 " Piket ;n " 10 07 " 2.24 " 8.35 - B-K Bnn.... " 111.19 " 2.38 lohnaon'a " l.';26 2.45 ' LncaTille " in 34 9.53 " 8 56 - Davia.... ' 10 42 u S.t'2 " Portmoutb " 1055 " 8 15 ' 9. IS - 0 N, W. Pepot . 107 " 3.17 " 9.17 ociowrilie . " 11.08 " 8..H0 " WheelembTirg i i 13 3.35 " Franklin Furnace ' 11.24 " S.4S " H-vrhil 11.31 8.54 " Hanging Bock 11 11. 40 " 4.15 1 ron Hn. " 1150 " 4.I0 10 5 - Pscersbnrg Ar 1 2 'Mi m. .25 10.15 - A. O. A I Junction. ' 12-iOp.m 4.45 10 35 Aialand... 12.30 4 56 (o.45 - CLARENCE OTJRTAIN, ATTOBNKY-AT-LAW, Olrcleville, Ohio. Offloe in Odd Fellowa' Block. r.o.satiTn. nu aoaaia. SMITH & MORRIS, ATT0BNKY8-AT-LAW,0ireleTille,0hlo. Offloe in Masonic Temple. SAMUEL W. COTJRTRIGHT, (Late Judge of the Court of Common Pleaa.) ATTOBNKY-AT-LAW, Circleville, Ohio. Offlce in Oourtricht'l new block. Oonrtitreet. north of Main. i.i.tnuniT. Bauer r.rouoM. ABERNBTHY & FOLSOM. ATTOBNY8-AT-LAW.CIrelille,OhIo. Offlce . In Old Masonic Block, formerly occupied by . jT.Ftge. J. P. WLNSTEAD, ATTOBNEY-AT-LAW ANDNOTABT PUBLIC. Oirclerille, Ohio. Offlce In Odd Fellows' build- tag, eeoona nory, corner room. WILLIAM VTETH, 4j-0TARY PUBLIC, Fire Inaurance, Seal Kitate jl. 1 collection unreau. umce 1 n Q O. Bayer'i Tailor Shop, S doora Eaat of Poit OBlce, Weat Main Street, Otrcleville, Ohio. PHYSICIANS. GEORGE T. ROW, TtHYBICIAN AND RTTnrt Trnw ne ...a 1 Idence, Eaat Main etreet, first door east ol carina jnarcie worta, uireieTille, Ohio. WILDER & BOWERS, PHruiulANS AND SURGEONS. Offlceln Pack'a Block. Entrance on Court atreet, in rear of . W. THOMWOB. T. B. WaiSBT THOMPSON & WRIGHT, IJUXSIUIANH AND 8UBOKONS. Lung and . " -" " ' -"wi. uimm apesiaity. rneumatli cabinet atttingi from 10 to 11 a. k. and 1 to 2 r. x except ;anay- "tnce on Court atreet, one door A. P. COTJRTRIGHT, pHYSIOIAN AND SUBQEON, Circleville, Ohio CHARLES NATJMANN, TTOMCEOPATBIC PHYSICIAN AND SUBOEON Li- ce in tne Nightingale Block, oppoeitr Court Houae, Circleville, Ohio. Office honra Eight to 10 a. m., 8 to 6 o'clock r. at., and 7 to 8 r. h E. A. VAN RIPER, FEMALE PHY8ICIAN. I am prepared to treat allof thediseaaea pertaining to the bnnian aye- .pui. uuswinc, a epeciaity umce and residence. locnn nnuae eaat or Farmerr Exchange Mill, Cir cieviiie. u. March 16, 1888. G. W. BUTLER r JSTf,KINAKY SURGEON. Graduate of Ontario V " etennary uollege, Toronto, Canada. Offlce ,, c'r- v'"rt ni High Ht., Circleville, 0. iiromptiy attended to. Telephone Boi No. R. LILLY, DEISTTIST Offlce 2d door east of Second National Bank, Mar. In, -BS-emoa. CIRCLEVILLE, O Trains Nofl. 2 and u Uaiiy. Tr.iit Nd. 4 datiy, except Scnday Train No. 4 tka Dinner at Chilllcothe. At stationa where time is omitted, trains do not st TRMNS GOING NORTH. STATIONS. No. 1. No. 3. No. ' ?hland Li 3:to.m 9. HI a. 01 5 OOp.n, A. V.X I. Junction- " 3 35 - 9.20 " 5 10 ' Ptrsburg ....' 4 05 " 9 40 " 5 30 " Iror.t n " 4 15 " 9.50 " A 40 " Birring Rock " 4 22 - 10 HO $50 " Bavnrliill " " iu.ll " ,.( " Franklin Furnace.." - 10. ,9 09 Whpe!erbnrg " 10.30 " 8.20 " Prlotcvillo . " . 53 - li, .-S - 6 5 - O. N. W. Depot " 501 - mi 48 fi ::8 , oit..month " 6 05 .0 55 - 6 40 " Davia " 11 08 " 6.53 " LncBSVille 6 24 11.15 ;,00 Johnson's 1I.22 - 7 ':7 " Big hun " i 36 11. " 7.13 " Piketoli " 47 - ; j .43 - 7 ofi - O. 3. Croaeing ' - 11.53 7 36 Wnverly .......... " '.58 - i sr, - T yt Sl aroo " 5 06 - I2.(i4p.n: 7 47 - Higby's " 6.13 I i 13 7.55 - Tbree Locks " - 12 24 - 11 - Ar. hliMo.the. " 8 35 - l s 23 - Lv. Chillirothe " K 50 .. 12 55 8 -26 - Hopetown ' 7 iK) i,n5 8 35 Kinnikiunick-.... " 7 07 1.12 s.42 Kingston " 7 14 - 1.19 - 8.49 Elmwood " 19 " 1.94 Hayenvtlle " 'i 24 - 1.29 t irclpville " 7 2 1 37 - q n7 Aahvllle .. " 7 51 1511 - 9 Jfi - I'mall's .. ' 7 r.7 ' 2 02 9 32 Lock bourne.. fill 2.09 9.29 Eeeee'y " 3.19 .. . - 9.4fi .. alley Oroeaing. . . 8.12 2.19 " 9.49 Infirmary 8.i7 2 25 Oolumbna Ar. 8.30 2 40 - 10.10 - Trains Nob I and 5 oal'.y. Train N 3 daily, ercepr Sunday. Train No. 1 takes breakfast at Cni'llcnthe. Train No. 3 ts Diunr at !h11iicotne. A" stations where time la omitted trains do not Hop. ,E. J. LILLY-, M. D. DENTIST, OFFICE IN WITTICH'S NEW BLOCK CIRCLEVILLE 0. FULLEN & BALDWIN NEW RESTAURANT, (B. BECHER'S OLD STAND.) TilE Finest Pla-e in the City. Op-n day and night. Mi als to order . Oysters in every style. Game and Fiah in siwion. The BHliaro Room at. tached has been renovated and better Sept. 14, 1888. MISS BERTIE COLE Winheg to inform the ladle that she still munufac iurea ALL KINDS OF HAIR GOODS, at uer anop, SOUTD PICKAWAY Street, up stairs, Over . B. COLE'S Blacksmith Shop. March 8a All Kinds of Book Holders Tttn urn c -n Dpurnn-i " J. nar liki As.tsjt.ja,i.nt U1UHUN AKX HOLD Jj it. Tl Prcpeuirj Euclra Table. Send for Catalogue. Fi. M . LAMBIE, 39 E. iethSt.,N.Y. ypyivvM POWDE find (lifemlcnl atilhorlllcs, who testify to it absolute purity. wboleaomeDew and Jwtriderful strength. Every in guaran- witn to ao tne worn 01 any oiner DHKing powder costing twice as much. Every can guaranteed to give satisfaction, or puri-unse money reiunaea. 1 lb. Cstn, SOc.; lb., iom M lb., Be. If your dealer does not keep Crown, do not let him persuade yon to buy some other ha claims to be just as good, but ask him to obligt vu eVVI"s DIETER'S CBOWK BAKIefS PQWfiEB- EDPKPdY. This is wbat too ouht to have, in fact, you must have it to fully eDioy life. Thou sands are searching for it daily, and mourn ing because they find it not. Thousands upon thousands of dollars are spent annually by our people in tne nope that they may at tain ibis boon. And yet it may be had by all. We guarantee that Electric Bitters, if used according to directions and the use pefalsteu In, will br.ng vou Good Diges'ion and oust the demon Dyspepsia and install instead Jiupepqy. We recommend Electric Bitters for Dyspepsia and all diseases of the Liver, btomnch and Kidneys. Sold at 50c and $1 per bottle, by Evans k Krimmel druggists. DO NOT SUFFER ANY LONGER Knowing acouh can be checked ina dav and the first stsges of consumptioL broken in a week, we hereby guarantee Dr Acker fingliBh Coil eh Remedy, and wiil refund the money 10 an woo ony, take it as per direc tions, and do not find our statement correct. J G Wildbb, druggist. WHAT R. B COOPER SAYS. . E. Jackson Dear Sir : I bad Bright's I disease in its worst form. I used two bot tles of your medicine, Burdick's Kidney Cure, and it has done wonders for me. The swelling has left my body and limbs, and I am so well I can walk out again This is the only remedy tbnt wobld feeh my caSa. Price, cents and $1 25. fivans 4 Krimmel. DANGER! Xroposccl. DR. ACKER'S ENGLISH PILLS Are active, effective and pure. For sick headache, disordered stomach, loss of sppe tite. bad complexion and biliousness, they have never beej equaled, either in America or abroad. J. G. Wilder, druggist. arbolisalve The Great Shin Remedy Relieves and Cure ItchlnsT9 and Irritations of tne Skin and Scalpi Either Itching' or Bleedlnp;, Ulcerations, Ccts, Wousd, Bsuisrs, Poi sons, Bites Of IXtiECTS.CATARRn, INFLAMKD Sorb Eye.;, Chilblains, Chaps and Chafes. R instantly reJieues Ois pain of Bums and Scalds, and cures (he worst case w ithmtt a ttxtH Small boxes 250. Large boxes 50b. Cole's Carbolisoap prevcntspimpies, blackheads, chapped and oily skin, and preserves, freshens uml beautifies the complex-Ion. It Is uncqualed for use in hard water, and its absolute miritv and delinntA ner- fume makes it a positive luxury for tn bath and nursery. Caution;- The labels on the genuine ftr nna tne ieni;ra u I'er.n. rrrpared only wi wiv a iAi., uiuua xuver i' aus. v la Sold by Geo. F. G.snd-G.rard. . ONE FACT Is worth a column of rhetoric, said an Amer icsn statesman It is a fact, established by the testimony of thousands of people, tbat Hood's SarF&prilia does cure scrofula, salt rhenm and other diseases or affections aria ing from impure state or low ci.ndition of the I blood. It also overcomes that tired feeling, creates a good appetite, and gives strength to every part of the system. Try it. ELIXIR OF DATES E'ixir of Dates is a luxury as well as a ne. -easily to all who suffer from constipation. dyspepsia, sick headache or piles. Bold by !1 rlrilrrivtn In n.ft fanl VmitX'Aa .nM K fi t . Urand Girard. A. "Wovtl of Warninj to Ke-puli" lioaiic4 mid Democrats Alike. The followinp; a'ticlo from the Cin cinnati Porcupino should put every citizen of Ohio, who brlievi-s in thrc purity of the flection, on his puu-d. Good laws can mt cnTorce thi'mrt Ives. Kegis- tration laws have ber-n and may he made a means of the nn-st gigantic and wholesale frauds evt rcoiiiiniltfd cm the bnllot-box in Ohio'. The Kor-aker-stranjler Third Term I'irates are a desperate crowd, and do not prr pose to ko-e this election if hrrzrn trr mi can defeat the aim of the peojile. Alrer.uy the honest men of C:m-ir.n:iti are orp-anir.in?; to capture and punish the rascals, if dirty work is done. Let this plan be followed in every city in Ohio: The electors of Iiomilton County and. the citizens of Cincinnati must arouse i themselves if they would prevent one of the most rascally, brazen schemes to defeat the will of the people nt the polls that has ever been concocted by a g'ang of political desperadoes, who fear noth ing but defeat. For a long series of years the city of Cincinnati has suffered in reputation, and great injury dene her business interests and prestig-9 by election frauds. This began in its most audacious form in the Presidential election, when Eph Holland and his gang Sot in their Che Work, for Which he was sent to the Dayton jail, from which he was pardoned by President Hayes. For years both parties imported black and white repeaters. In IbSi the city was disgraced by the armed bullies, black and white, under the infamous Iot Wright. In 1SS5 came the disgraceful exposures of which the Precinct A, Fourth Ward fraud was only an incident. The shameful assaults upon the integrity of the ballot-box has not been confined to either party. ltoth Republican and Democratic politi- cians of Cincinnati have been shown themselves capable of any rascality, and willing and anxious to commit any crime that would defeat the will of the people as honestly expressed by the ballot, and l?ad to the tt mporary success of their respective gangs and par ties. So frequent did the se outrages be come that thty grew monotonous; ana while thev oxcited the disgust of honest men, they Boomed powerless to protect j themselves. The agi'.ation led to the enactment of laws to protect decent people from the bullies, toughs, and professional political rascals. A registration law was tiassed: men were preft-nted from going within one hundred feet of the polls: an election board was created; judges and clerks of both parties were selected from the best citizens. Good results followed these laws, and for several years the people of this county and State have been repeatedly to.d that the elections in Cincinnati were absolutely fair and honest under otir present sys tem. Good prople have come to believe I his. That guardi.i of law anil order; disbanded, and vigilance sleeps, and the j citixens have been lulled to rest with fancied security. Xow, what are the ' tacts? There have been some of the ; most daringfrauds committed under this i so-called perfect system. Two years ago the labor candidate for Mayor was hon- j estly elected, hut he was counted out after the face of the returns at the Hoard LOOSE'S EXTRACT f.LOYER BLOSSOM v TUP flD n sSani..j rw..j. OUR VERY BEST PEOPLE Confirm our statement when we eay tbat Dr. Acker's English Remedy is in everyway superior to any and all other preparations 'or 'he threat and lungs. In wboopine ongh fnd croup, it is magic and relieves at nee We offer you a sample bottle free Re nemter, this remedy is sold on a positive U'lrar.tee. J. G. iloeb, druggists. A QUAKER'S OPINION. What John L. Haines, of Woodbnrv, N J.. says: J E Jackson Dear Sir: I had kidney trouble for years very bad; my pains at times were so great I would roll ;n the n .or I thought my case a helpless .ne. I used two bottles of your medicine (Burdick's Kidney Cure), and now I can do any kind of work. I recommend this to all sufferers. Price. 75 cents and $1 25. Sample free. For sale by Evans & Krimmel. ot lrauds that will surpass any rascality of the kind that has ever been committed or attempted. At first the judges and clerks appointed were the very best, but a number of professionals have gradually crept in who can not be trusted, and who must be watched. Certain irregularities have already arisen under the new election laws. The boxes are removed from the room when the voting takes place, and the habit has been revived of dumping the tickets in a pile on the table and sorting out the straight tickets, placing them in piles. These two vie latiims of law afford the opportunity for wholesale frauds. The registration aids in the perpetration of the fraud. It shews the rascals just how mtnv votes there are in a precinct. The l'oiciipiiie hrs information of a reliable character fvem a very curious source, which sl.i v.- t; at. ballot boxes have 'ieen proi uivd o: the exact duplicate of the regular i cX'-s. 'I hes.- are tobestuffed in ativnnce with . nch number of llepub- l!c:.n l'ck ts .-. may !. ne cessary and nie. Tb'-y w ll l.e placed in the hands of despi r:?te. smoolSi. but nervy men who are T( -p-v!::l le.' and when the poll clcse the regular box will disap-p ar and the str.fkd box will be put in its ph ce, and t'i" fraudulent votes will ; becounif d. If ihis fails, advantage is : ;o be taken of the habit of piling the ! straight Democratic and Republican j ticket in piles oi ten. As many Demo-! cratic ti-kets a possible will disappear, j and straight Republican tickets will be ! put in iheir prices. liy these two methods encugh fraudulent votes will be counted to have the enlii'e county ticket and prevent Governor Koraker from running behind in Hamilton County. The Cincinnati Cc rcmercial is preparing the way for this hold and infamous ras-rttlity. In an editorial Wednesday it said: "Campbell orght not to have 1,000 votes in Hamilton County." Tho Commercial might have as well said: "'Boys, destroy 30,000 Democratic votes and you will be protected." When we remember that there are two judges on the common pleas bench who are oath-hour.d members of the Strsnglers" secret organ ization, all may know that the rascals can understand that the Commercial is encouraging them to commit crime and promising then immunity. Had such a brutal bid -for rascality appeared in the editorial columns of the Enquirer, the Republican press in Ohio would have howled in horror. Appearing in the tommercial they are silent, or smilingly approve. "Anything to win," is the motto of the politicians of both parties. Hut the people of our city have more at stake than the politicians. The good name of Cincinnati must not be tarnished by fresh crimes against the right of fran chise. The Stranglers are a desperate gang. They are playing for big stakes. If Foraker wins there arc two more years of stealing and of rascality, and protection is guaranteed. If they loose. many of them will go erazv. Some will go to the penitentiary or asylum: many will go to Canada, and not wait for excursion rates. A fund should be raised, detectives employed, and a reliable citizen detailed to watch every ballot-box from the time the first vote is cast until the last, is counted. The Hoard of Elections ought to order every ballot-box fastened to the table in the room where voting is done, and only one vote f-hould be allowed to be taken from tho box at a time to be counted. What will yiiu do. .O men of Cincinnati? Will V( sit Willi folded hands and permit these crimes to be matured and perpetrated, or will you arise in the majesty of your wrath, and by prbiiijit action drive the bold and audacious knaves to cover? The committees of both parties are untrustworthy. There are men on both that would sell out their parties if they could get their price, twelve cTcTTts Tlave drawn in salaries over 340,000. or twenty cents for each separate name. Whilo Sl:20,000 additional has been spent, making the average cost of each name so far put in the roster eighty cents. Does any body pretend to say that the work should cost any such a sum of money? Kay, verily: it is simply working patriotism for boodle. It is a bonanza for a lot of political hangcr"s-on, whose services to the State consist of drawing unearned salaries and defaming and abusing men for being Democrats and opposing Forakerism and political phlebotomy. These stipendiaries draw salaries from the State and spend their time in running Foraker organs, disseminating Foraker literature, or working in the Republican Committee on State street. They outrival Comanche Indians in howling "boodle" and reviling respectable Democrats who earn honest salaries in honorable employment, while they draw seventy-five dollars per month and upward from the State Treasury for services they never perform. This scandal has become so notorious and flagrant that I regard it as a public duty to expose and denour.ee it. Its perpetrators are not content with the plunder they secure, but seek to prolong and perpetuate their oppor tunities by defaming, assailing and slandering respectable gentlemen who object to the State Treasury being turned into a third-term corruption fund slavering about patriotism and loyalty nd purity, with their arms up to their .'ihews in the public strong-box. Heboid the spectacle of the State Li- brar.an, whose salary is paid by Demo- vats. Prohibitionists and Republicans like, serving as Secretary of the Re-liMican Stale Committee, while seekers Her informa'ion go subsoiling after jook:, ent' inbtd in dust and cobwebs. Then turn to a Railroad Commissioner, a Commissioner of Labor Statistics and other officials paid enormous salaries by the State, w ho serve it by working m a partisan committee, organized to feed the vanity and promote tho ambition of one man, Who publicly characterizes t leading member of his own party Presi dent's. Cabinet as "an obscure Secre tary." Xo wonder that men like General Beatty, Captain Lee, General Walcutt, Dr. Ferrell and other distinguished Republicans give vent to their disgust to find the self-constituted leaders of thei party running a campaign on funds which belong to the State. I have called tho attention to this single scandal in the mildest terms possible. It is only one of a series that go to make up the sum total of political Phariseeistri and third termism which now rules the Republican roost. CAMPBELL AS A LEADER. From an Independent Stand point. The Springfield Sunday Neics (Inde pendent) says : James E. Campbell, Democratic nom Inee for Governor, has developed a virllit of courage and a stamina of vigor, as a campaigner, which have almost amazed the enemy, and enthtlsed and delighted the Democracy. Everywhere Mr. Campbell is in popular and urgent demand as a speaker. It will be impossible for him to accept .more than" one-third of the appointments which are clamorously pressed upon hitn. He has gotten near to the Democratic heart and every member now eagerly awaits the publication of bis speeches. The graceful way in which, he refutes the attacks of slander, and Where is the Committee of One l his manly manner of rebuking his tra- are candidates each at the head of his party s ticket. They are both above the average. Campbell I know nerson- ally. He is a first-rate fellow, and I promise that he shall make vou an ex cellent iiovernor. 1 promise vou that f he is elected he shall not reach out for too much power. All his acts will be such as you will approve, and they will not be for himself. ow for Foraker. He is also a eood fellow, but he is entirely too ambitious. He forgets that this fetate was organ- zea in 1801, nearly ninety years aeo. and that never yet has any man dared to oner Himself for the office of Gover nor three successive terms. We have had some excellent men as Governors men whom we have creatlv loved and respected, and whom we would aimost nave Deen wiiline to elect a third time. But the rule has been im perative. When they have served two terms they say, "stand aside ! Why is a aeparture from this eood rule now asked ? Some say that the rule does not apply to the State, but it does. All honor to George Washington for the splendid example he set to the United States and to the States themselves, I which has now for the first time, by the great State of Ohio, been trampled in the dust, suppose that George Washington had consented to serve three or four or an indefinite number of terms; suppose that Jefferson had consented ; suppose that Jackson had. Wouldn't we have had pretty near an elected monarchy by this time. This question, my friends, is your greatest care. I would ask what need have the Republicans to bring forward Foraker now? What crisis is at hand ? "On what meat doth this Csesar of ours feed?" At the boundary of the second term there flows a political Rubicon. If we cross it we are in Csesarism. I say, and I hope the people of Ohio will say, Stand back ! W e must say to Fora ker : "There have been others as loved as you, but we did not call them ; neither will we call you. The rule has by custom been given the sanctity of law. lt one century trom now we can say that no man has served a third term we can sav "There is no Cpesarism in our Government," but that we are a plain, honest Republic as in this dav. I wish you all had Mr. Campbell by the hand. Every one of you would like him. He is a good fellow, a plucky fellow, too, and in my opinion he will make an excellent Governor of our State. The Republicans have abused him because of his tariff opinions. I have not talked wth him on that subject, but I think he is about right. He is not a high protectionist, he is not a free trader. He is for taxation for rev enue only. What more would you have? A voice Campbell. Our Govern ment's not a corporation, and it has the right to raise revenue to carry on the Government, that is all. When an industry is in the cradle I am willing to rock it that's only motherly care. But when it rises in giant manhood and is able to pay out millions to carry an election I am not for it. I am for the protection of the people. So is Campbell. I venture to say that upon this subject Mr. Campbell is just where you On The Atlantic Ocean. 0" Shipboard, Steamship Rotterdam, 1 October 17th, '89. orreapondeuce Democrat and Watchman, Through Holland, I came to Belgium. It is much the same as Holland; near the coast, in fact, the same. The land is ditched and the water pumped into canals and carried away. Timber is scarce, and they are cultivating pine lorests as in Germany and in Holland. Passing through the country, you soon come to Brussels, the capital of Belgi um. It is quite a pretty city, but it is very hilly. Here Leopold II., King of Belgium, resides, and as in all other countries of Europe, you see plenty of t-okliers, although in case of war I doubt !f the Belgians would make much of a i.how, as they are a small fry compared with other European powers. The monetary unit there is the same as in franco. One hundred centimes make n franc, and five francs make one dollar. French is the language spoken in Belgium, and is in fact the language of the country, though near the line of Solland, the people speak both French iind Dutch. The city of Antwerp, on the river Scheldt, is the great maritime port ot Belgium, and has the finest docks in Europe ; the steamers of the Red Star Line land there, and the facilities there for handling freight are unsurpassed by any city in the world. The oity is laid out somewhat like Paris. The avenue De Keyser and other avenues remind one of the boulevards of Paris, and like Paris, is a city of hotels and boarding houses. On avenue De Mier is the house in which Rubens, the celebrated painter lived, in the year 1564, and a bust of him on the house with an inscription under it, reminds the passer by of that fact. In Antwerp, on Sept. 6th, 1889, occurred the greatest disaster that ever was in Belgium. Two men, M. Corvillianand Baron Hirsch, had bought fifty millions of condemned rifle cartridges of the Spanish government, in Spain, and were separating them in a large building in Antwerp, to make what they could out of them the lead, copper and gunpowder; there was a large amount of powder in the building and an explosion took place, damaging buildings for three-quarters of a mile around, and bursting the large Russian petroleum storage tanks, close by. The oil set fire to houses near the docks, and there was a great fire, lasting three days, and cartridges were exploded by the fire, and the houses and vessels near by looked as if a battle had taken place there. There were over one hundred and fifty people killed, and nearly four hundred wounded, the cartridges ex- would have him. Let us be impartial ; ploding all the time, sent bullets flying let us favor no classes. Class favorit ism, class privileges in such a country as ours, would only breed class hatred and strife. I have not been at a public meetine for ten or twelve years. A few years ago I was mad at the management of the democratic party, but now 1 am de lighted. I just ieel first rate. We have made a new start, and it is a splendid one. We are going to elect our Governor, a Democrat who1 will administer the government satisfactorily to both parties and who will not be greedy for patronage. If he does this we will re elect him, but if he puts his head up land, lor a third we are going to crack: it. of Elections showed that he had several ' Hundred? Where is the Commercial hundred majority, and that fact was ' Club? And the Chamber of Commerce? sent brondeast ail over the land. The ' Are you not all interested in an honest artists who committed this crime may . h4 fair election? Honest Democrats, be found to-day holding publico offices, j hottest RepubiicatlSi honest men of all and their names arc enrolled on the ros- ! parties, trades, callings, ahd professions, ter of the oath-bound Stranglers. From y want an honest election, meet information in the hands of the Poicu-i "d organize. Be vigilant and ready to pine, it is questionable whether Nayor arrest tho knaves, thieves, perjurers. Mosby was honestlv elected last spring, gam uiers, anu lascais at luenrsbevi- J ' , t r a rv i. r : l Facts nointed with unerring accuracy to , uenra ol uu. iuc iuupiu Ms CO TOaOB UAJtK sa in? oTTBisa Cancans. Hnmora. Sores. Ulcers. Swellinra. Tumors, Abscesses, Blood Poisoning, Salt Rheum, Catarrh, Erysipelas, Rheumatism. uu mis diwq ana dxid uiscases. Pbicb, $1 per Pint Bottle, or 6 Bottles for $5 iw, voa ooiia extract j.ou- J. JL LOOSE BED CLOVER CO.. Detroit. Mich. THAT TERRIBLE COUGH la the morning, hurried or difficult breath 1 g, raising phlegm, tightness in the chest, quickened pulse, chilliness in the evening r sweats at- nignt, all or any of these tines are the first stages of consumption !)r Acker's English Cod it b Remedy Will ire these fearful symptoms, and is sold no sr a positive guarantee by J. G. Wilder, druggist. BLUDBILDPR, The new vegetable tonic-allerative and Moid pnriuer, is in the shape of a pleasant -yrup, and contains in a concentrated form the most valuable vegetable curatives. which have been developed by modern medical and scienti6c research. It acts di rectly upon the blood, through it imparting tone and vigor to the entire system and eradicating disease and is unequalled as a ure tor tserolulous. Cancerous and other humors, whether constitn'ional or other wise. Catarrh, Khenmatism, Dyspepsia. Dropsy, sick and nervous headache, female weaknes?. and all Wood, liver and kidney diseases. Price, $1.00. Sold by Geo. F. Grand Girard. A SOLID TEEL FENCES MAUK OF sr. r ,UI SEJxenT1' SGiWETKING NEW. For Residences, Churches, Cemeteries, Farms Gardens. Gates, Arbors, Window Guards, Trellises, Fire-tiroof PLASTERING LATH, D0OB BATS, Ao. write for Illustrated Catalogue: mailed free CENTRAL EXPANDED METAL CO 116 Maler St., PittHbtirgh, Pa, Hardware flea keep it. Give name of this papa J. M Loose Red Clover Co. Gentlemen: I have been a sufferer for the last five years from rheumatism across the shoulders, and by using yonr Fluid Extract Red Clover, am entirely relieved; believe it has driven It from my system, and won t be a weather barometer any longer. Yonr truly. Palmer Bouse, Chicago. F. D. Dibbli. Sold in Circleville by Geo. F. Grand Gi rard, druggist. THE FIRST SYMPTOMS OF DEATH. Tired feeling, dull headache, pnins in va rious parts of the body, sinking at the pit of the stomach, loss of appetite, feverishness, pimples or sores, are all positive evidence of poisoned blood. No mutter how it became poisoned it must be purified to avoid death. Dr. Acker s Eaelish Blood Elixir has never failed to remove scrofulous and syphilitic poisons. Sold under positive guarantee by J. G. Wilder, druggist. Jackson's Wild Cherry & Tar Syrup. Tiie sttttidnrd remedy lor cough, colds, crenp, It. aiseof. bronchitis, asthma, q-iinsy, wh-topio ntfth i ic iii rit cun-mnption, aud all diteaaesof ths 'hrit and lungs, lt has stood the test for years .nd is c;'nilaupy STjVjns; in the public favor Krl'li 1 fc' J2VANIJ $ Kill MSI KL, ppt.6, ui WrcjgviU?, 0. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castorla. When she was a Child, she cried for Castorla. "Hien she became Miss, she clung to Castorla. f 'nen she had Children, she gave them Castoritv Tlmi is moner, but health is hippinesg, If you have a bar cold or cough use Dr. Bull's, Cough Syrup. J( wil pure ynq every time. Pripe, J5 cede, ' ' the conclusion that he was counted in in three Wards over the Hhine. The Republicans do not select bunglers and butchers c fio their infamous work like the Democrats have done. It is all done so artistically, so cleverly, so fairly, that it leaves no trail, and deceives the most honest and unsuspecting. Let us illustrate. At the lVesidential election in ig4. there were wonderful and. une countable gains in a number of Republican wards of this city. Hon. Dan Mc-Conville, on the Democratic State Executive Committee, came to Cincinnati to make an investigation. A precinct in j the Twelfth Ward showing the largest . Republican gain was selected for investigation. The precinct was polled, ! and the voters could not be found. The poll books were ex-aimed at the County Clerk's office, and 116 names were found on the list ina strange handwriting. Mike Ryan was one of theDemocratic judges of election. He is now a furitlvo from justice, a thief, and embezzler, and a wanderer on the face of the earth. That day he perjured himself; and sold out his party. He, with all the other judges and clerks left tho polls for thirty miniiles in tbB hands of the United States Supervisor, and while they were gone, he wrote ll(5 names on the poll pook. and put that number of Republican ballots in the bos for Maine liiitterWdfth afl4 refdrmi Will Taft, now a Common Pleas .liidgp; fcas then United States Supervisor of Flections. He issued printed instructions to all his precinct supervisors, quoting the law nnd fixing the duties of each. Among other things, eaeh supervisor was told i hat it was his right and duty to be prese nt during the balloting and counting of the votes; but under no circumstances was he to interfere with the election officers, or to assume or discharge any of their duties. In vidftionof the plain letter of the lsw. ibis si pcrvisor took entire charge cf Ihe polls, end sttifiid theballot-box, writing as many names as he could in thirty minutes. Ti.e attention of iir. Talt wat called to the violation of l::w by his deputy, as pft forth in his own letter of instructions, and to the peculiar acts am' circumstances con nected with that unlawful proceeding. He scornfully laughed, and brushed the Whole charge away with a toss tf the head, a wave of the haflrb, and the lofty information that "that man belonged to one of tho best families in Cincinnati, and his character as a citizen and a lawyer was above reproach." That man of such good fam ly and such spotless character has since proven ono of the most audacious rascals, forgers and criminals ever known in the history of Cincinnati. Ilut he was respectable. He sleeps in a suicide's grave. His name is Charles A. Kebler. Some innocents will say that such an act can not be commi tted under the present laws. No; but worse ones have been committed, ar.d are about to bo committed under the present laws, and aided by ail the machinery the law has set in motion. We do not mean to reflect upon the character of tho gentlemen who compose tho Hoard of Elections. They are above reproach, but their duties are in their office. They can not watch tho ballot box in each precinct on tho day of election. Good citizens should do that. Good citizens have not done that. Good laws can not enforce themselves, and the rascals, always vigilant for opportunities, hae found them; and. emboldened ,y pgt siiy-cegsea, thy are noy m'tjajjjja;' ft j8 has spoken. It cares not who is elected: but, with all good citizens, it is deeply moved and profoundly interested in an honest election. We must have if, or fctiB sfvernment is a failure. Let us have iiniteci arid brbhipt ast'or!:- Cincinnati Porcupin". (Ind.) A Scandalous Leak in the State treasury Exposed, On the 15th of March, 1S84, the Democratic Legislature, elected with Gov ernor George Hoadly, passed a joint resolution providing for the publication of a roster Of Ohio soldiers in the late war to perpetuate a record of the various organizations and the names of the in dividual members thereof in a permanent and populiirly accessible form. There was appropriated to carry on the work the sum of 5,000. During the adjourned session in 18S9 9,300 addi tional was appropriated, making J514,500 In all. Ten clerks were employed sixteen months in the work, and about two- thirds of it Was completed wheh Fbraker and H tlepubliCari Legislature came in, and the Democratic clerks were turned out The Work which remained to be done oh the roster aflorded but little chances for pickings, so a bonfire was iriade of all the carefully prepared roster copy and a small army ot Republican1 clerks were put on tho State pay-rolls to do the' work. They began in January, 1SS0, and the pay-roster has been swelling ever since, until new it has reached enoimous and dropsical proportions, with a steady growth going on. Alter the lapse of nearly four years twelvo stipendiaries have performed about as much work as ten clerks did in a little more than a year. It will take them two years more to finish the work at the rate they have been proceedihgi And how inUch has it cost during the past four years? The figures are startling Wheh one considers the amount of Work that has been done by Governor Foraker! stipendiaries. The sums of money paid blit and appropriated, under the Foraker regime, amount to S?it0,'J1.7 38, as shown by the official records. What was there to do in preparing the roster? To prepare fr m the muster rolls in the Adjutant-General's office, so as to put in book form, the complete company and regimental organizations of the Ohio troops in the war. In other words, to make a complete copy of the records on file. It was a big job of copying, but one that could be done readily. There were 318,189 soldiers enrolled in Ohio during tho war. Consequently there were 318,180 mimes to copy with brief annotations showing that the sol dier was discharged, was killed, had died, was missing or had deserted, as the case might bp. It would not be a very big job to copy 200 names in a day. At this rate it would require one man 1,591 days, or five years one month and three days, estimating 312 working days in a year. lt would take twelve men less than a year to do it. Yet t elve men are finishing up their fourth year at the job. The ten Democratic clerks managed to prepare 200,000 names for $14,500, or at the rate of seven cents per name. Under the Republican regime for preparing tfce Banie number of nam.ps ducers have pushed him to the fore front as one of the most influential speakers and successful campaigners in the party. Mr. Campbell is not only taking Care of himself but he is helping his party as Well, tt is deplorable that the Republicans should have begun a mild campaign against Mr. Campbell because it has called fdr the' exposure that Governor Foraker is a erf vul nerable man in many of his relations to his fellowmen. Mr. Campbell does not mirice matters where his honor or integrity are impugned. His force, p"f 5fhJ'tnSS and clearness of denial and refutation, and his identity and de scription of the men who are doing the dirty work, have captivated the people, and won for him the admiration and confldehse of the voting public. The TJemocratic party is t nthusisstically and warmly congratulating itself on the brilliancy, the energy, the industry, the gallantry and the valor of their leader. in all directions, and many victims of the explosion who were at work in the building, were burned up. All the plate glass windows in the vicinity were broken into pieces, and some shipping and warehouses damaged, and the event will never be forgotten in Antwerp or Belgium. The hospitals of Antwerp are full of the wounded, many from bullet wounds caused while the fire was in progress. . We left Rotterdam on the steamship Rotterdam, of the Netherlands Line, on Oct. 5th, and are now at this time about nine hundred miles east of Newfound- and except for bad and rough weather, we would now be in New York. On board are about one hun- Two Important Election Laws. dred "a"118- 1 hey got on the ship at The Legislature of Ohio last winter looking lot of people. On Oct. 15th, passed two important election laws, i one of them died, and that night they one concerning persons loitering about I Put him to gd se threw him over-, - .. , ,, ., . board to feed the fishes. It would have places of voting, and the other in re-1 . . ftAr Tnr thft t,,,,, StatJl if th. gard to having two clerks in election ! wnole lot of them had died, but I sup-precincts one of each party so as to ', posA it might have been a little rough insure "an honest count." 1 on the fish, so large a dose of them at The first law is here given in full : AH ACT one time; however, they are well fed on this steamer, and would not care if the vessel did not reach America until To amend Section 2938 of the Revised j next summer, for they are getting what statutes. j they never got in Italy three square SectIo's 1. Be tt enacted by the General j meals a day. Asssembly of ihe State of Ohio, That Section 2938 be amended to read as follows : Sec. 2938. Judges of elections shall, I Last night, we met the steamship of the Bremen Line, bound for Germany. She showed her lights, three white lights in form of a triangle. One if requested, permit the respective can- j hour later we met the French Line diriatea. or not exceeding- three of their i steamer, bound for France. She too trienas, to De present in the room where the judges ere during the time of receiving and counting out the ballots ; and at all elections held within boundaries of any municipal corporation during the receiving and counting of the ballots no person shall congre showed her lights, red, white and blue, while we showed our lights of the Netherland's, American Line, green, white and green. This line of steamers are not very fast, there time being ten or twelve days, but the accommoda tions are good, and every berth on the The Adams Co. Ixfcnder, 17th ult savs : Foraker's coon clerk of the Chillicothe Election Board is a daisy. He was in the rebel army and now he is in a muss which shows him to be a worthy associate of George Cox and Tommy Thompson. Charges were preferred against him last week by the A. M. E. Church of Chillicothe, accusing him of lying and performing an abortion. My, doesn't "Little Breeches" surround himself with a sweet-scented set? J The Pittsburg Post says : It is pretty clear that James E. Campbell is a level headed man ; knows when to hold his tongue and when to Speak. There is a spice of acuteness in hlS JJolitife management of this lorgery business that shows him fully competent to ceal with "the Stranglers," as the Foraker gang is called. elector in reaching or leaving the place fixed for casting his ballot, or within such distance of seventy five to give or to tender or exhibit any ballot or ticket to any person other than a judge oi election, or to exhibit any ticket or bal lot which he intends to cast, or so licit or in any way attempt to influence-any elector in casting his vote. In the discharge of their duties, the judges o: elections may, if necessary, appoint and require any elector or electors to aid them in making known their orders or directions and in enforcing the peace. The judges of election, or any of them, may order the arrest of any person violating this section, but such arrest shall not prevent such person from voting if he is entitled so to do. The sheriff, and all constables, policemen, and officers of the peace, and all bystanders at any election, shall imme diately obey and aid in enforcing any and every lawful order made by the judges at any election in execution o' the provisions of this section. Any person willfully refusing or neglecting to perform any of the duties of thio section rtrese.rihed. shall be fined not Because it succeeded in committing i ,u five d0nar8 nor more thai: grand larceny on the Presidency of the i one thousand dollars, or imprisoned in United States, the Republican party j the county jail not less tnan nve days iL . .. .. ,;f 7. nor more than thirty days, or both- miagmesthatit can commit peUt idedf nothing as 8ectiol. ceny on Montana. Times have changed, i 8hall be go conBtrued as to conflict with gate or loiter upon the streets, alleys i line from Europe is full for this month's and sidewalks within seventy five feet j sailing. A steamer leaves Holland for of the nollinir nlftce of anv elefttinn. nr America, every Saturday. Most of the in any manner hinder or delay any i provisions used on board the vessel are however, since the country permitted Itself to be disgraced by the infamous fraud of 1876. The Republican State ticket in Virginia is composed of Mahone and two other rebel brigadiers. HON. W. S.'gROESBECK. His First Democratic Speech for Years. Hon. William S. Groesbeck, in his address at the Music Hall Democratic meeting, in Cincinnati, Thursday evening, 24th inst., said : Now about the constitutional amendment. It is upon taxation. The old Constitution rjrovides that taxes shall be levied on all property according to its value in money. This looks all right, and it is. Why, then, is this proposed amendment offered ? It conies from where I know not ; by whom it was prepared I know not. It may favor the money-lender at the expense of the farmer ; in short, it would oreaK down all barriers of the weak against the strong. By it all power will be conferred on the Legislature. Am I in favor of this? Not if I know myself. sections 2926 to 2926m;, inclusive. Section 2. That section 2938 of the Revised Statutes is hereby repealed. Section 3. This act shall takes effect on its passage. Elbert L. Lampson, Speaker of the House of Representatives Wm. C. Lyon, President of the Scnati. Passed April 15, 1889. The enactment in regard to clerks at each election is as follows : Sec. 2932 (a). In all public election:. in townships not divided into electioi precincts there shall be two clerks, hav Ling the qualifications of electors there in, one ot whom snail oe tne townsnit' clerk and the other shall be chosen sa provided in section two thousand nine hundred and thirty-five, and he shsi, not be a member of the same politica'. party as the township clerk. And n. townships divided into election pre cincts there shall be two clerks in eacl Dreclnct. The township clerk shall act as one of the clerks in the precinet in which he resides, and the othe; clerks Bhall be chosen as provided i; section two thousand nine huiidrc and thirty -five ; provided, that only one of the clerks so chosen in each precinct shall belong to the same political part- as the township clerk, and in all casf I., . . i . - i ,la I IIP DOllUCUl Ultl l-v UtWHIIE iuc iik-a If any one could give me a Legislature from heaven. comDOsed entirely of an gels, I would not give unlimited powers . highest vote at the preceding townshi . of taxation to it. I election to the dominant party in that I 'ow bout the two young men wtio .ownsiup gftaii be reevea, of American production, except beer and cigars, which are of Holland manufacture, and are cheap, for there is no duty in Holland on the manufacture of either of them. This vessel is an iron steamer, four hundred and twenty feet in length, has four masts, and her speed is about twelve miles an hour, and she burns fifty tons of coal every twenty-four hours, and has electric lights throughout. There are about four hundred passengers on board, about two hundred of them being emigrants. They are brought to New York for twenty-one dollars each, thirty five hundred miles, board included. It is very cheap, but it pays the company, for no freight pays so well as emigrants. These are the free trade goods that come in the United States free of duty, and the effect will be felt more in the future than in the past. Stick a pin here. Time will tell. They just now tock some beef from the cold storage room, for use on the ship ; it costs twenty cents per pound by the carcass, in Hol land; the same beel costs in jersey City, U. S., eight cents per pound by the carcass, yet some people have the call to say you can live cheaper in Eu- ., - . : a-, i . c 1 1 - rope man in America, i tie iuci. ut iua matter is this, there is only one coun try where the people all live, that is in America; in Europe only half of them live, the other half simply exist, and in some parts it is a struggle for that. I have not seen a pie since 1 leu America ; they are not used in Europe. The barbers, oh ! they are a caution. chloroform would have no effect on a man when an European barber started to work on him. To the American barbers I would say, when you shave a man from Europe, go at him rough, ior he may think he has not got the worth of his money if he is not almost skinned alive, same as he is at home. In a few days 1 expect our vessel will reach New York, then I will step ashore in the best country on the globe. The Worlds rair or Jixposition, I hear, is to be held in New York, in the year 1892, to celebrate the landing in America, of UolumDus. ine grounds have been selected ; they are bounded by 127th street on the north, and 97th street on the south, and are between Fourth avenue and North river. It is said the Committee will spend for site and buildings, fifteen million dollars, besides they will use most if not all of Central Park. It is intended to eclipse the Paris Exposition, and if it does it will be a monster, for up to Sept. 15th, the admissions to the Pam Exposition were 17,096,952, as shown by the Secretaries of the same ; the railway to and in the grounds averaged 33,000 passengers daily up to September 15th, but as America is a land of wonders, this record may be beaten. Yours Respectfully, TowsstND N. Caskev.